Conversion of CO<sub>2</sub>‐Derived Amorphous Carbon into Flash Graphene Additives
Article 2023 en
Authors
PA
Paul A. Advincula
WM
Wei Meng
JB
Jacob L. Beckham
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract CO 2 emissions have become a significant environmental problem over the last few decades, often stemming from combustion of fossil fuels. Production and disposal of waste plastic also contribute greatly to greenhouse gas emissions, due to combustion of fossil fuels during manufacture and incineration or pyrolysis of the waste materials. Hence, researchers have begun developing technologies geared toward the capture, sequestration, and utilization of CO 2 . Several methods are shown to be useful for conversion of gaseous CO 2 into solid carbon feedstocks, such as molten carbonate electrolysis. At the same time, flash Joule heating can rapidly and inexpensively convert carbon‐rich feedstocks into flash graphene (FG). Here, amorphous carbon derived from molten carbonate electrolysis of carbon dioxide is converted into FG, sometimes in combination with waste plastic, and demonstrated for use as a reinforcing additive in composite applications. FG can be used in epoxy and vinyl ester resins with a maximum increase in Young's modulus and hardness of 73% and 73%, respectively. Life cycle assessment also shows that adding 5 wt% 25:75 amorphous carbon‐derived FG to the epoxy results in 7.7%, 5%, and 2.7% decreases in CO 2 emissions, water consumption, and energy consumption, respectively.
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