Open Research Newcastle
Browse

Ordered Mesoporous Boron Carbon Nitrides with Tunable Mesopore Nanoarchitectonics for Energy Storage and CO2 Adsorption Properties

Download (4.04 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 20:43 authored by Sathish Clastinrusselraj IndirathankamSathish Clastinrusselraj Indirathankam, Gopalakrishnan Kothandam, Jiabao Yi, Ajayan VinuAjayan Vinu, Premkumar Selvarajan, Zhihao Lei, Jangmee Lee, Jiangtao Qu, Ala’a H. Al-Muhtaseb, Xiaojiang Yu, Mark B. H. Breese, Rongkun Zheng
Porous boron carbon nitride (BCN) is one of the exciting systems with unique electrochemical and adsorption properties. However, the synthesis of low-cost and porous BCN with tunable porosity is challenging, limiting its full potential in a variety of applications. Herein, the preparation of well-defined mesoporous boron carbon nitride (MBCN) with high specific surface area, tunable pores, and nitrogen contents is demonstrated through a simple integration of chemical polymerization of readily available sucrose and borane ammonia complex (BAC) through the nano-hard-templating approach. The bimodal pores are introduced in MBCN by controlling the self-organization of BAC and sucrose molecules within the nanochannels of the template. It is found that the optimized sample shows a high specific capacitance (296 F g-1 at 0.5 A g-1 ), large specific capacity for sodium-ion battery (349 mAg h-1 at 50 mAh g-1 ), and excellent CO2 adsorption capacity (27.14 mmol g-1 at 30 bar). Density functional theory calculations demonstrate that different adsorption sites (B-C, B-N, C-N, and C-C) and the large specific surface area strongly support the high adsorption capacity. This finding offers an innovative breakthrough in the design and development of MBCN nanostructures for energy storage and carbon capture applications.

Funding

ARC

FT100100970

History

Journal title

Advanced Science

Volume

9

Issue

16

Article number

2105603

Publisher

Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

School of Engineering

Rights statement

© 2022 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative CommonsAttribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction inany medium, provided the original work is properly cited.