Pyrolysis of Porous Organic Polymers under a Chlorine Atmosphere to Produce Heteroatom-Doped Microporous Carbons

Molecules. 2021 Jun 15;26(12):3656. doi: 10.3390/molecules26123656.

Abstract

Three types of cross-linked porous organic polymers (either oxygen-, nitrogen-, or sulfur-doped) were carbonized under a chlorine atmosphere to obtain chars in the form of microporous heteroatom-doped carbons. The studied organic polymers constitute thermosetting resins obtained via sol-gel polycondensation of resorcinol and five-membered heterocyclic aldehydes (either furan, pyrrole, or thiophene). Carbonization under highly oxidative chlorine (concentrated and diluted Cl2 atmosphere) was compared with pyrolysis under an inert helium atmosphere. All pyrolyzed samples were additionally annealed under NH3. The influence of pyrolysis and additional annealing conditions on the carbon materials' porosity and chemical composition was elucidated.

Keywords: ammonia annealing; chlorine; heteroatom-doped carbon; microporosity; organic polymer carbonization.