| Nome: | Descrição: | Tamanho: | Formato: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.5 MB | Adobe PDF |
Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
The alarming rise in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions has been met with urgent calls to the scientific community and global enterprises. As a solution, CO2 capture and conversion could remove, store, and properly convert some of the gas into useful substances. The present review highlights the use of ionic liquids (ILs) and biomass for the preparation of nitrogen-doped (N-doped) porous carbons that can serve as CO2 adsorbents and catalysts for conversion reactions of the same gas. The physical and chemical properties of ILs (tunability, stability, controllability) as well as the economic viability of biomass (inexpensiveness, availability, renewability, and environmental friendliness) have piqued the interest of researchers in this field of study. This review also provides the different carbonization methodologies in detail, and the effects of biomass origin, carbonization methodology and processing parameters on the final properties of the porous carbons are summarized. Strong efforts have been applied to the use of biomass and/or IL-based carbons in CO2 capture showing promising results for this application, while the development of carbon catalysts with biomass and /or ILs is still in its infancy, although promising results can already be seen in the literature.
Descrição
ROTEIRO/0031/2013; PINFRA/22161/2016
POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007688
2021.03255.CEECIND
Palavras-chave
Carbonization methodologies CO adsorption CO valorization Ionic liquids Ionothermal carbonization N-doped porous carbons General Chemical Engineering Fuel Technology Energy Engineering and Power Technology Organic Chemistry
