Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1277363 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Highly porous carbons have been successfully synthesized by chemical activation of polythiophene with KOH. The activation process was performed under relatively mild activation conditions, i. e., a KOH/polymer weight ratio of 2 and reaction temperatures in the 600–850 °C range. The porous carbons thus obtained possess very large surface areas, up to 3000 m2/g, and pore volumes of up to 1.75 cm3/g. The pore size distribution of these carbons can be tuned via modification of the activation temperature. Thus, by increasing the activation temperature from 600 to 850 °C, the nature of the carbons changes gradually from microporous to micro-mesoporous (with small mesopores of up to 2.5 nm). The polythiophene-derived activated carbons are sulfur-doped with sulfur contents in the 3–12 wt% range. The sulfur content decreases at higher activation temperature. The hydrogen storage capacity of these activated carbons, at cryogenic temperature and 20 bar, is up to 5.71 wt% with an estimated maximum hydrogen uptake of 6.64 wt%. Their ease of preparation and high uptake makes the polythiophene-derived carbons attractive hydrogen storage materials.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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