Synthesis of Micro-Porous Boron-Substituted Carbon (B/C) Materials Using Polymeric Precursors for Hydrogen Physisorption

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© 2009 ECS - The Electrochemical Society
, , Citation T. C. Mike Chung et al 2009 ECS Trans. 19 57 DOI 10.1149/1.3237108

1938-5862/19/10/57

Abstract

This paper discusses a novel route to prepare porous boron substituted carbon (B/C) materials that show a significantly higher hydrogen binding energy and physisorption capacity, compared with the corresponding carbonaceous (C) materials. The chemistry involves a designed boron-containing polymeric precursor, which is the polycondensation adducts between BCl3 and lithiated phenylene diacetylene. During pyrolysis, most of the boron moieties in the precursor were transformed into a B-substituted C fused ring structure, and the in situ formed LiCl by-products created a porous morphology. The resulting porous B/C material with 7% B content and 700 m2/g surface area has been prepared, which shows a reversible hydrogen physisorption capacity of 0.6 and 3.2 wt% at 293 and 77 K, respectively, under 40 bars hydrogen pressure. The physisorption results were further warranted by absorption isotherms and in situ 1H NMR studies, indicating a binding energy of hydrogen molecules of about 11 kJ/mole, significantly higher than the 4 kJ/mole reported on most C surfaces

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10.1149/1.3237108