One-pot synthesis of nitrogen-doped carbons with hierarchically micro- and mesoporous structures for supercapacitors and CO2 capture†
Abstract
Nitrogen-doped mesoporous carbons are considered promising candidates for supercapacitors and CO2 sorbents. However, synthesis of mesoporous carbons usually requires expensive soft or hard templates. In this study, we demonstrate that cost-effective nitrogen-doped carbons can be synthesized through a one-pot method by using tetraethoxysilane (TEOS), triethylamine (TEA) and tetraethylammonium hydroxide (TEAOH) as the precursors. The in situ formed silica derived from TEOS serves as a hard template while TEA and TEAOH are the carbon and nitrogen sources. By removing the hard template, mesoporous carbons are generated. It was found that the carbon (TUD-700) carbonized at 700 °C has the largest pore volume (1.18 cm3 g−1) and the largest surface area (1050 m2 g−1). The specific capacitance of TUD-700 can reach 360 F g−1 in the three-electrode system. The energy density and the power density of the assembled symmetric supercapacitor can reach 30.4 W h kg−1 and 455.1 kW kg−1, respectively. TUD-700 and TUD-600 were also used as a tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA) support to prepare “molecular basket” solid amine sorbents to capture CO2. The CO2 uptake of 50A/TUD-700 can reach 3.53 mmol g−1. The TUD-700 based solid sorbents show better CO2 capture performance than TUD-600 based sorbents due to the larger surface area and the larger pore volume.