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Study on the preparation of activated carbon for direct carbon fuel cell with oak sawdust
Author(s) -
Zhang Jubing,
Zhong Zhaoping,
Zhao Jinxiao,
Yang Min,
Li Weiling,
Zhang Huiyan
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the canadian journal of chemical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.404
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1939-019X
pISSN - 0008-4034
DOI - 10.1002/cjce.20549
Subject(s) - activated carbon , anode , materials science , carbon fibers , chemical engineering , sawdust , catalysis , graphite , electrochemistry , bet theory , chemistry , adsorption , composite material , electrode , organic chemistry , composite number , engineering
Abstract Direct carbon fuel cell (DCFC) is a device, which converts chemical energy of carbon into electrical energy through electrochemical oxidisation directly and its performance enormously depends on the characteristics of the fuel used. In this study, oak sawdust is used to prepare the activated carbon for the DCFC, with K 2 CO 3 as the activating agent. Nickel catalyst is applied to improve the electrical conductivity, while HNO 3 treatment is used for the purpose of surface modification and ash removal. The performance of the prepared activated carbon in DCFC is evaluated in a self‐built DCFC anode apparatus. The results show that the BET surface area of activated carbon reaches 1240 m 2 /g under the following conditions: activation temperature, 1173 K; activation time, 2 h; and impregnation ratio, 1. Electrical conductivity is well improved through the nickel catalyst while the amount of surface oxygen functional groups is increased and ash content is decreased through the HNO 3 treatment. When used as the fuel in the DCFC anode, the self‐made activated carbon exhibits predominant performance among all tested carbon fuels, including graphite, activated carbon fibre, etc. © 2011 Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering