Controlled Synthesis of Biochar with Flower-like Morphology for CO<sub>2</sub> Adsorption: Enrichment and Efficient Accessibility of <i>N</i>-Containing Sites
Junjie Zhang, Guangyang Li, Shibiao Zhang, Jingai Shao, Xiong Zhang, Shihong Zhang, Haiping Yang, Hanping Chen
Abstract
The N -doped biochar is recognized as a promising, cost-effective, and efficient material for CO 2 adsorption. However, achieving efficient enrichment of N -containing adsorption sites and improving their accessibility remains a bottleneck problem that restricts the adsorption performance of N -doped biochar. Herein, a synthesis strategy for nitrogen-doped biochar by one-pot ionothermal treatment of biomass and zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) precursors accompanied by pyrolysis is demonstrated. Through ion thermal ZIF modification, biochar exhibits a controllable flower-like morphology with effective enrichment of nitrogen elements (nitrogen retention rates ranging from 62% to 88%). After pyrolysis, this regular morphology is retained, and a developed hierarchical pore structure is formed. Compared with pristine biochar and ZIF-derived carbon, ZIF-modified biochar has superior CO 2 adsorption capacity (up to 3.5 mmol/g) and excellent CO 2 /N 2 adsorption selectivity (up to 38.6). The CO 2 adsorption capacities of ZIF-modified biochars have a good linear relationship with both bulk and surface N content, with correlative coefficients of around 0.998 and 0.950, respectively. This positional indifference reflects the effective accessibility of N -containing sites, which can be attributed to the ordered flower-like morphology and hierarchical pore structure of ZIF-modified biochar. The DFT results confirmed the importance of the number and accessibility of such N -containing sites for CO 2 adsorption.