METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR PRODUCTION OF DOPED CARBON NANOMATERIALS
20200032404 ยท 2020-01-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
C25B1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B32/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C25B9/17
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E60/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B82Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C25B15/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C25B1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B32/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A system and process for producing doped carbon nanomaterials is disclosed. A carbonate electrolyte including a doping component is provided during the electrolysis between an anode and a cathode immersed in carbonate electrolyte contained in a cell. The carbonate electrolyte is heated to a molten state. An electrical current is applied to the anode, and cathode, to the molten carbonate electrolyte disposed between the anode and cathode. A morphology element maximizes carbon nanotubes, versus graphene versus carbon nano-onion versus hollow carbon nano-sphere nanomaterial product. The resulting carbon nanomaterial growth is collected from the cathode of the cell.
Claims
1. A method for producing a carbon nanomaterial comprising: heating a carbonate electrolyte to obtain a molten carbonate electrolyte; disposing the molten carbonate electrolyte between an anode and a cathode in a cell; including a carbon nanomaterial doping component in the cell; including a nanomaterial selection component in the cell; applying an electrical current to the cathode and the anode in the cell; and collecting doped carbon nanomaterial growth from the cathode of the cell.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the nanomaterial component is free of transition metal, the method further comprising application of an alternating current electrolysis current to the electrolyte.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the electrolysis current is selected for carbon nano-onion product growth.
4. The method of claim 2, further comprising adding ZnO to the electrolyte, and wherein the electrolysis current is selected for graphene platelet product growth.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising adding MgO to the electrolyte and wherein the electrolysis current is selected for hollow carbon nano-sphere product growth.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the nanomaterial selection component disperses a transition metal and wherein the nanomaterial selection component is selected for carbon nanotube product growth.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component is free of doping additives, and wherein the doping component is selected for intrinsic nanomaterial growth from the cathode.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component includes at least one of a solid electrolyte additive, a liquid electrolyte additive, a gas electrolyte additive, a cathode material, or an anode material.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein the doping component is a solid salt, an element, or a covalent compound, wherein the doping component is dissolved, reacted or suspended in the electrolyte.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component contains includes at least one material with a group 3 element.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component contains includes at least one material with a group 1 element, or at least one material with a group 2 element, or at least one material with a non-carbon group 4 element or at least one material with a group 5 element, or at least one material with a group 6 chalcogenide element, or at least one material with gold, platinum, iridium, iron or other row 4, 5 or 6 metals.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component contains a species with oxygen atoms or halide atoms, or comprises one or more of sulfate, nitrate, phosphate, thiophosphate, silicate, borate, thionyl chloride, sulfur chloride, silicon chloride, boron chloride, or borochlorate, thiophosphate, thionyl nitrate, silicon nitrates and nitrites, boronitrides, and boronitrates salts, or sulfur oxide or nitrous oxide gas.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the doping component includes more than one doping element.
14. The method of claim 1 wherein said cathode or anode comprises at least one material or alloy selected from the group consisting of: nickel; copper; chromium; iron; manganese; titanium; zinc, zirconium; molybdenum; tantalum; platinum, iridium cobalt; silicon; and carbon pure metal.
15. The method of claim 1 wherein said doping component comprises a coating on the cathode or the anode.
16. The method of claim 1 wherein the carbon nanomaterial is a carbon nanotube.
17. The method of claim 1 wherein the carbon nanomaterial is graphene.
18. The method of claim 1 wherein the carbon nanomaterial is a carbon nano-onion.
19. The method of claim 1 wherein the carbon nanomaterial is a hollow carbon nano-sphere.
20. A method for producing doped carbon nanomaterials comprising: providing a carbonate electrolyte including a doping component between an anode and a cathode in the cell; heating the carbonate electrolyte to a molten state; applying an electrical current between the anode and the cathode through the carbonate electrolyte disposed between the anode and cathode; and collecting carbon nanomaterial growth from the cathode of the cell.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the doping component is dissolved, reacted or suspended in the electrolyte.
22. The method of claim 20, wherein the doping component contains at least one material containing one of boron, silicon, germanium, nitrogen, phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, gold, platinum, iridium or iron.
23. The method of claim 20 wherein the cathode or the anode comprises at least one material, or an alloy, selected from the group consisting of: nickel; copper; chromium; iron; manganese; titanium; zinc, zirconium; molybdenum; tantalum; platinum, iridium cobalt; silicon; and carbon.
24. The method of claim 20, wherein the carbon nanomaterial growth includes at least one of carbon nanotubes, graphene, carbon nano-onions and hollow carbon nano-spheres.
25. The method of claim 20, wherein the carbonate comprises at least one of an alkali or alkali earth carbonate, or includes at least one additive of a metal oxide, or at least one of lithium, barium, calcium, magnesium or zinc oxide.
26. The method of claim 20, wherein the nanomaterials have a length of greater than 100 m.
27. The method of claim 20, wherein the nanomaterials have a length between 1 to 100 m.
28. The method of claim 20, wherein the nanomaterials have a length of less than 1 m.
29. A system for producing a carbon nanomaterial, the system comprising: a current source; a cell holding a molten carbonate electrolyte between an anode and a cathode; a carbon nanomaterial doping component in the cell, wherein the current source is operable to apply an electrical current to the cathode and the anode in the cell to generate doped carbon nanomaterial growth from the cathode of the cell.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0034] While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0035] The present inventions can be embodied in many different forms. Representative embodiments are shown in the drawings, and will herein be described in detail. The present disclosure is an example or illustration of the principles of the present disclosure, and is not intended to limit the broad aspects of the disclosure to the embodiments illustrated. To that extent, elements and limitations that are disclosed, for example, in the Abstract, Summary, and Detailed Description sections, but not explicitly set forth in the claims, should not be incorporated into the claims, singly or collectively, by implication, inference, or otherwise. For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed, the singular includes the plural and vice versa; and the word including means including without limitation. Moreover, words of approximation, such as about, almost, substantially, approximately, and the like, can be used herein to mean at, near, or nearly at, or within 3-5% of, or within acceptable manufacturing tolerances, or any logical combination thereof, for example.
[0036]
[0037] The carbonate furnace 102 heats a carbonate electrolyte such as pure Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 to the respective melting point to produce molten carbonate electrolyte. There may be a variety of mechanisms to power the carbonate furnace 102 such as by solar energy or conventional power plants. Transition metal is added via a disperser to serve as a catalyst. The molten carbonate electrolyte is subjected to electrolysis by being inserted between the anode 112 and the cathode 114 in the electrolysis chamber 104.
[0038]
[0039] In this example, a carbon nanotube growth elongation element is added to the cell 110 that holds the anode 112, cathode 114 and the carbonate electrode. Such carbon nanotube growth elongation elements may include nickel; copper; chromium; iron; brass, manganese; titanium; zirconium; molybdenum; tantalum; cobalt; silicon; carbon; and alloys and mixtures thereof. In the presence of transition metals, such as Ni, to act as nucleation sites, formation and growth of carbon nanotubes readily occurs under a wide variety of conditions in lithium carbonate mix molten electrolytes. The transition metal can originate from anode dissolution during initial stabilization of the anode surface, or in the case of noble-like oxygen anodes such as iridium, be added as the metal or salt to the electrolyte. As will be explained below, the carbon nanotube growth elongation element may be the cathode material, the anode material or transition metal or the salt of a transition metal added to the electrolyte. In this example, the 770 C. carbonate electrolyte is Li.sub.2CO.sub.3, electrolysis is conducted at 0.1 A cm.sup.2, and the electrolysis includes a carbon nanotube elongation element of 1 wt % Ni metal powder initially added to the carbonate electrolyte. The cathode 114 is fabricated from Monel or Copper alloy.
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[0042] The products in the images 220, 222, 224 and 226 in
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[0045] The product in the images 320, 322, 324 and 326 in
[0046] As seen in the SEM images 330, 332, 334 and 336 in
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[0048] The SEM image 402 shows that a varied, rather than direct, electrolysis current as shown in the current graph 404 can lead to an electrolysis product with an entirely different morphology. In this example, when identical electrolysis conditions are used as those to produce the product shown in the image 400, except that the potential is kept below 1.2 V and cycled, the cathode product exhibits an observed carbon nano-onion, shown by the image 402 rather than long carbon nanotube morphology. The observed nano-onion carbon morphology is a new product as derived from a straightforward CO.sub.2 electrolysis, by constraining to low potential and cycling the electrolysis constant current density. The nano-onion carbon products are valuable when synthesized via more expensive CVD depositions and are valued at over a million dollar (US) per ton.
[0049]
[0050] The SEM image 440 shows a larger carbon nano-onion product produced from applying direct current, rather than alternating current applied electrolysis current. Instead a Zn coated (galvanized) steel cathode and an IR anode is used during the electrolysis. The 420 C. melting point of the Zn facilitates these larger observed carbon nano-onion products. However, a uniform carbon nanotube product dominates (not shown), when a low current pre-electrolysis step is added to initiate the formation of transition metal nucleation points on the cathode. With this pre-electrolysis low current step, replacing the pure Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 electrolyte with a mix including 5% LiBO.sub.2, 11.4% MgCO.sub.3, 0.6% ZnO and 83 wt % Li.sub.2CO.sub.3, forms a large proportion of hollow carbon spheres (along with carbon nanotubes) as shown in the washed product in the SEM image 442. The product in the SEM image 442 includes a MgO precipitate (suggesting that unlike Li.sub.2O, MgO is highly insoluble in Li.sub.2CO.sub.3. A similar electrolyte mix with CaCO.sub.3, rather than MgCO.sub.3, yields a predominantly thin walled carbon nanotube product as shown in the image 444.
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[0053] Pure B.sub.2O.sub.3 has a melting point of 450 C. and has a white color but melts clear and the melt is a glass insulator. However when molten B.sub.2O.sub.3 contains dissolved Li.sub.2O (mp 1438 C., white, melts clear) it becomes an electrochemical conductive liquid. The binary system of B.sub.2O.sub.3 and Li.sub.2O presents a complex phase diagram with an extensive homogenous liquid phase above 767 C. Here, it is that the combined salt of boron and lithium oxides, lithium metaborate, LiBO.sub.2 (mp 849 C., white) is highly soluble in Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 (dissolves clear), retains a high electrochemical conductivity, and is a successful additive for the one-pot synthesis of boron-doped highly conductive carbon nanotubes.
[0054] The methodology of electrolysis of carbonates to convert CO.sub.2 into doped carbon nanotubes is simple and without being bound to any theory, in one step involves addition of the desired dopant during the synthesis, for example by electrolysis lithium carbonate which occurs simultaneously with the production of oxygen and dissolved lithium oxide:
Li.sub.2CO.sub.3(liquid)+dopant.fwdarw.C(CNT.sub.doped)+Li.sub.2O(dissolved)+O.sub.2(gas)(1)
Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 consumed by electrolysis is continuously replenished by reaction of this excess Li.sub.2O, formed as a product in the) electrolysis reaction (1), with CO.sub.2 from the air (or CO.sub.2 available in higher concentration from stack emissions):
Li.sub.2O(dissolved)+CO.sub.2(gas).fwdarw.Li.sub.2CO.sub.3(liquid)(2)
The net reaction (combining reactions (1) and (2)) is:
CO.sub.2(gas)+dopant.fwdarw.C(CNT.sub.doped)+O.sub.2(gas)(3)
[0055] The washed, boron doped product is shown in the images 500 and 502. At higher levels of added LiBO.sub.2 (>10% by mass), the level of non-uniform impurities in the carbon nanotube product increases (not shown). Specifically, with <10% by mass of LiBO.sub.2 plus 50 g Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 electrolyte, very good quality, straight carbon nanotubes are formed in the system of 1.5 g, 3 g, or 5 g of LiBO.sub.2 respectively. However, there was still 10% amorphous carbon nanoparticles in the product as estimated from the SEM images 500 and 502. With the 5 g addition of LiBO.sub.2, the diameter distribution of the carbon nanotubes (200 to 500 nm) is somewhat larger than observed when no LiBO.sub.2 is added. When 8 g of LiBO.sub.2 (>10%) was added, the diameter of the carbon nanotubes was quite widely distributed in the range from 150 nm to 1.5 m, indicating more LiBO.sub.2 induced heterogeneity. The high level of LiBO.sub.2 may alter the macro-environment of reduction at the cathode, and/or the deposition of boron onto some nickel nuclei can form NiB instead of pure Ni resulting in a more heterogeneous growth patterns with less nanostructure. At 17 wt % added LiBO.sub.2 to the Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 electrolyte, particles, rather than nanotubes, became the dominant product.
[0056] To identify whether the obtained carbon nanotubes are boron-doped carbon nanotubes, or a mixture of boron and pure carbon nanotubes, Raman spectra were recorded using an incident laser of 532 nm and were presented in the graph 510 in
2LiBO.sub.2.fwdarw.2B+Li.sub.2O+3/2O.sub.2(4)
[0057] Boron-doping is known for the production of metallic carbon nanotubes and enhancing the conductivity of (CVD synthesized) carbon nanotubes. To investigate the boron dopant effect on molten carbonate synthesized carbon nanotubes on the conductivity, samples were measured with increasing level of boron dopant and is compared to the products shown in the images 500 and 502 in
[0058] The successful and direct pathway here for the one-pot electrosynthesis of boron doped carbon nanotubes from carbon dioxide via the addition of a soluble lithiated dopant to the molten carbonate electrolyte suggests a similar pathway and opportunity for the synthesis of other doped carbon nanotubes, such as nitrogen, phosphorous or sulfur doped nanotubes. Different dopants inserted into carbon nanomaterials at different concentrations change both their physical and chemical properties.
[0059] Boron and nitrogen have been the most studied carbon dopants due to their proximity in size (and atomic number) to carbon. The common polyatomic anions metaphosphate, nitrate, and sulfate with lithium as the cation (LiPO.sub.3, LiNO.sub.3 or Li.sub.2SO.sub.4), are soluble in molten lithium carbonate. Compared to the 3e.sup. reduction needed to form elemental boron as a dopant from lithium metaborate, LiBO.sub.2, LiPO.sub.3 and LiNO.sub.3 would respectively require a 5e.sup. reduction to form elemental phosphorus or nitrogen, and Li.sub.2SO.sub.4 requires a 6e.sup. reduction to form sulfur. Whereas boron, phosphorus and nitrogen are less electronegative than carbon, sulfur is more electronegative. Hence, as a rough estimate (based on electronegativities and without attempting to predict competing kinetic phenomena) carbon may be easier to form by electrolysis from the oxide, than boron, phosphorus or nitrogen, making the latter oxides good candidates for simultaneous reduction to elemental dopants during carbon nanotube electrosynthesis, whereas sulfur may be a thermodynamically preferred reduction product to carbon nanotubes, which could inhibit carbon nanotube formation in a sulfate containing electrolyte.
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[0061] The SEM image 602 shows carbon nanotubes containing sulfur from molten carbonate electrolysis with 0.1 mole % sulfate subsequent to a 2-hour electrolysis at 1 A (using the conventional galvanized steel cathode and Ni 200 wire anode and without added Ni metal powder). Electron dispersive spectroscopy of the carbon nanotube product measured 0.1 mole % of sulfur in the carbon nanotube product. As in previous experiments, prior to this higher current extended electrolysis, cathode nucleation was facilitated by an application of lower constant currents sequentially applied (each for 10 minutes) and increased from 0.05, 0.10, 0.25 to 0.5 A. The initial 10 minutes lowest current electrolysis occurred at a potential of 0.4 to 0.5 V, which is consistent with the expected nucleation by Ni on the cathode while each of the subsequent increasing constant currents occurred at increasing potentials between 1 to 2 V. No carbon product (carbon nanotube or otherwise) was observed to form at the cathode during the electrolysis with higher sulfate concentrations, such as 1 mol % (or 3, or 5 mol %) Li.sub.2SO.sub.4 in 770 C. Li.sub.2CO.sub.3. The observed potentials at 1 A are lower with higher [Li.sub.2SO.sub.4] (and are lower than the 1-2 volt electrolysis potential observed without Li.sub.2SO.sub.4). This lack of carbon nanotube formation at higher sulfate concentration is in accord with the electronegativity of sulfur compared to carbon, which favors the thermodynamic formation of the former compared to the latter. To improve the energetics of carbon formation, the concentration of sulfate is decreased (relative to carbonate) creating a pathway to the observed formation of sulfur containing carbon nanotubes.
[0062] A carbon nanotube product is also observed from electrolysis of LiNO.sub.3 in the 770 C. Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 electrolyte. In this case, the yield of carbon nanotubes improves with a 5 mole %, compared to a 1 mole %, dissolution of LiNO.sub.3 within the electrolyte. Presumably, the added, dissolved lithium nitrate equilibrates to lithium nitrite in the molten electrolyte. This is analogous to the known solid state thermal decomposition for solid LiNO.sub.3 that occurs above 500 C.
LiNO.sub.3.fwdarw.LiNO.sub.2+1/2O.sub.2(5)
Electron dispersive spectroscopy analysis, subsequent to electrolysis, indicates nitrogen in the carbon nanotube product.
[0063] Dopants have been demonstrated as introduced during the synthesis by dissolution of oxide containing dopants into the electrolyte. It is evident that pure elements or other salts can also be employed to introduce dopant additives. Examples of such additives, by way of illumination and without being restricted by this example, include sulfur, boron, thionyl chloride, sulfur chloride, silicon chloride, boron chloride, or borochlorate, thionyl nitrate, silicon nitrates and nitrites, boronitrides, and boronitrates.
[0064] The example demonstrates that dopants may be input to the electrolyte through the gas phase, rather than by dissolution of solids or liquids in the electrolyte. Molten carbonate carbon dioxide electrolytic splitting occurs in facile (high current density) and low energy (low electrolysis potential) manner with cold or hot inlet gas, gas containing from 0.04% (atmospheric), or 5 to 13% (as in natural gas or coal power plant flue gas, or 33% (as in cement flue gas) or 100% CO.sub.2 concentration. Here, a gas is mixed to simulate a coal plant flue gas containing average SO.sub.2 and NOX concentrations. NOX, and SO.sub.2 and CO.sub.2 in the correct proportions to air are continuously added through a duct fan inlet prior to entering the carbonate electrolyzer. The CO.sub.2 flow rate is and measured at 76 liter/minute (for the 200 kg daily transformation of CO.sub.2 to carbon nanomaterials) by a calibrated Omega mass flow controller MA5400/500 mass flow controller, which is for up to 131 liter/minute flow. NOX is generated in lab by the reaction of copper metal with nitric acid; the rate is controlled by acid strength and relative thickness of the copper. More NO is produced at lower nitric acid concentrations (4 molar NO), while pure brown NO.sub.2 is formed in concentrated nitric acid. The 4 molar nitric acid gradually turns from colorless to blue as the Cu.sup.2+ enters the solution. Similarly, SO.sub.2 is produced by the direct reaction of sulfur powder with sulfuric acid. Inlet gas air flow rate is monitored with an in-line Digi-Sense Hot Wire, a thermoanemometer with NIST traceable calibration. The NOx and SO.sub.2 bubbled into the electrolyzer at the low (ppm) levels of NOx and SO.sub.2 did not impact on the observed carbon nanotube physical chemical characteristics or formation.
[0065] The example demonstrates that the carbonate electrolyte can absorb carbon dioxide at rate sufficient to maintain the highest rates of molten carbonate electrolysis and that with sufficient insulation, the molten carbonate electrosynthesis is self heating and/or may generate useful excess heat.
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[0068] A one step molten carbonate electrosynthesis of doped carbon nanotubes is demonstrated for boron, nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus doped carbon nanomaterials. In an analagous manner multiple dopant source materials and types should lead to the electrosynthes of carbon nanotubes with multiple dopants, and this simple synthetic approach as applied to a wide variety of simple additives to the electrosynthesis will open a wider portfolio of doped carbon nanomaterials for example containing and doped with one or more of the following: boron, silicon, germanium, nitrogen, phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, gold, alkalis or alkali earths, nickel; copper; chromium; iron; manganese; titanium; zinc, zirconium; molybdenum; tantalum; platinum; iridium; cobalt; silicon; and (other than C.sup.12) isotopic carbon.
[0069] When the material to be deposited with the carbon nanomaterial requires an electrolysis potential greater than that required to deposit carbon from carbonate, than a two step molten carbonate synthesis can successfully deposit the material. As an example, silicon was not found in the product that was deposited in a one step 770 C. electrosynthesis during electrolysis in a Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 electrolyte containing nickel powder and Li.sub.4SiO.sub.4. A two step electrosynthesis process results in successful deposit of desired material. The first step performs electrolysis in an electrolyte with 0.42 g nickel powder and 52 g of Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 (and no Li.sub.4SiO.sub.4). Then the electrodes are moved to continue the electrolysis in the second step in a second electrolyte consisting of 18.4 g of Li.sub.4SiO.sub.4 and 40.2 g of Li.sub.2CO.sub.3 (and no nickel powder). The observed electrolysis potential is 1.4V for the first step and higher at 2.3V for the second step. The resulting washed product exhibits carbon nanotubes as observed by a SEM image. In the resulting nanotubes, Si based carbon was observed as evidence by both electron dispersive spectroscopy and by the formation of a new Si peak at 480 cm.sup.1 arising in the measured Raman spectrum.
[0070] Without being bound to any theory or pathway,
[0071] In
[0072] In
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[0074] In
[0075] In
[0076] It is the synergistic combination of multiple nucleation agent elements, such as the addition of a specific type, and concentration of transition metal(s), addition or exclusion of an oxide, and addition or exclusion of isotopic carbon produces, along with carbonate composition, electrolysis, charge, time, and temperature that produces the carbon nanotubes of different morphologies.
[0077] In contrast, a new pathway 840 uses the directed addition of sources with dopant atoms during the molten carbonate electrolysis to form doped, rather than intrinsic, carbon nanomaterials, with specific, desired, different chemical physical properties, and the electrolysis is conducted directly without the need to induce doping as a post treatment.
[0078] Also in contrast, the new pathway(s) from the pathway 820 use the directed exclusion of nucleating agents to direct the specific formation of new (non carbon nanotube) carbon nanomaterial morphologies of during molten carbonate electrolysis. The new pathways 821, 823 and 825, and synergistic combinations of those pathways, form carbon nano-onions, graphene, or hollow carbon nano-spheres cathode products.
[0079] Dopant atoms introduced during the molten carbonate electrolysis are directly incorporated into the carbon nanomaterial building at the cathode during the electrolysis to form doped, rather than intrinsic, carbon nanomaterials, with specific, desired, different chemical physical properties, and the electrolysis is conducted directly without the need to induce doping as a post treatment. The facile high yield, low energy, synthesis of doped and diverse morphology (but uniform as synthesized using specified pathways) carbon nanomaterials may be accomplished by the above processes. These carbon nanomaterials have high conductivity, high strength, high electrical storage, high blast resistance, catalyst specific functionality and pollutant sorbant capabilities. The molten carbonate electrolysis synthesis removes both atmospheric and/or anthropogenic carbon dioxide from the environment. The substantial effect of the electrolysis configuration and conditions is demonstrated both on carbon morphology, doping, Raman spectroscopy and SEM, and on carbon nanotube conductivity. The activation effect equivalent to that of galvanized (zinc plating) is accomplished without a zinc coating. This opens the pathway to study a wide variety of alternative non-coated cathode electrodes. This doping is accomplished directly by the addition of dopant containing, and control of morphology is accomplished by several techniques which include the exclusion of nucleating agents to the electrolysis.
[0080] The carbon nanomaterials may be made very electrically conductive, round, solid or hollow, or flat or thin or thick walled, or long or short, and with a variety of chemical physical properties. This expanded portfolio of inexpensive to synthesize molten carbonate electrolysis product carbon materials is suitable to similar applications use by other materials for example in metals, combining, braiding or weaving into wire, cables, wires or cloths, textiles, batteries, catalysts optical devices, packaging materials, lower-weight, fracture and blast-resistant construction and ceramic materials, and electronics.
[0081] The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms a, an and the are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. Furthermore, to the extent that the terms including, includes, having, has, with, or variants thereof, are used in either the detailed description and/or the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term comprising.
[0082] Unless otherwise defined, all terms (including technical and scientific terms) used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. Furthermore terms, such as those defined in commonly used dictionaries, should be interpreted as having a meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of the relevant art, and will not be interpreted in an idealized or overly formal sense unless expressly so defined herein.
[0083] While various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Numerous changes to the disclosed embodiments can be made in accordance with the disclosure herein, without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above described embodiments. Rather, the scope of the invention should be defined in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.
[0084] Although the invention has been illustrated and described with respect to one or more implementations, equivalent alterations and modifications will occur or be known to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several implementations, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.