Catalyst-free development of N-doped microporous carbons for selective CO2 separation†
Abstract
Herein, we present the rational development of N-doped microporous carbons (NMCs) through a catalyst-free nucleophilic substitution reaction of rigid monomers, followed by temperature-controlled carbonization. NMC-700 shows a large specific surface area of 1571 m2 g−1, a high pore volume of 0.88 cm3 g−1, and a micropore diameter of 4.2 Å with variable nitrogen contents. Notably, NMC-700 demonstrates an excellent CO2 uptake of 212.1 mg g−1 over benchmark adsorbents including MAPOP-4 (135 mg g−1), CPOP-13 (168 mg g−1), UTSA-50a (200.3 mg g−1) and most reported carbon-based adsorbents at 273 K and 1 bar. More importantly, NMC-700 shows high CO2/CH4 selectivity (30) which is notably higher than that of recently reported adsorbents including PCTF-3 (6.0), CuPor-BPDC (6.0), BILP-16-AC (9.0), and MAPOP-4 (11.3) at 273 K and 1 bar. Our study shows that the high CO2 uptake and excellent CO2/CH4 selectivity are achieved mainly due to the presence of desired functionalities and appropriate well-defined micropore structures in NMCs. Owing to their easily scalable synthetic method, catalyst-free development, and high-yield, the fabricated NMCs are considered as industrial adsorbents. Hence, these NMCs are very promising adsorbents in selective CO2 separation from natural gas.