Synthesis of sulfur-doped porous carbon from heavy coker gas oil and its application in CO2 capture†
Abstract
Elemental sulfur is used to cross-link heavy coker gas oil (HKGO) with only 0.44 wt% olefinic hydrogen content in the absence of solvent; subsequent pyrolysis yields sulfur-doped porous carbon with Brunauer–Emmett–Tell (BET) surface area (s.a.) around 1714–1785 m2 g−1. The heavy coker gas oil does not need demetallation or hydrotreating to enable this. The usual problems (residue metal and sulfur/nitrogen) in HKGO became an opportunity in product carbon to anchor CO2 resulting in high sorption capacity.