Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
75874 | Microporous and Mesoporous Materials | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Carbon-based cryosorbers are generally synthesized in the form of powders, which compromises the volumetric capacity in gas storage applications. Here we report the synthesis of monolithic carbide-derived carbon (CDC) by chlorination of fully-dense ceramic titanium carbide plates. Volume change is minimal, consistent with conformal transformation from TiC to CDC, and the weight loss is consistent with nearly 100% conversion. The resulting materials have a microporous carbon structure with little or no macroporosity and exhibit enhanced volumetric gas storage capacity compared to powder equivalents. Optimized volume uptakes are 35 g L−1 at −196 °C and 60 bar for H2, 193 V(STP) v−1 at 35 bar and 219 V(STP) v−1 at 60 bar (25 °C) for CH4. Monolithic CDCs thus offer potential as gas storage media for on-board fuel-cells and other applications.