Owing to their unique characteristics, graphene aerogels are considered promising materials for a wide range of applications in fields such as energy storage, catalysis, and sensing. A research team from the Tsinghua University (China) has successfully demonstrated that another item can be added to this impressive list — adsorption and pre-concentration of air pollutants. Hierarchical porous graphene aerogels (HPGAs) synthesized via self-assembly, freeze drying and subsequent calcination have been shown to possess outstanding characteristics for extracting chemical warfare agents (CWAs) from ambient air.
The researchers found that the graphene aerogels, composed of a porous three-dimensional pore network (see Figure above), exhibited a good thermal and mechanical stability. Adsorption experiments with sarin, a highly toxic nerve agent, showed that the HPGAs display outstanding adsorption/desorption behavior in a wide range of operation conditions (e.g. desorption temperature, relative humidity). Furthermore, repeated cycling of the graphene aerogels did not result in a drop in adsorption efficiency or a change in material morphology, underlining the high resilience of HPGAs.
Given those intriguing results, the authors hypothesize that graphene aerogels could be efficient materials for the removal of other hazardous gases from air and hence might prove to be a promising alternative in cases of industrial accidents or terrorist attacks.
More details: Qiang Han, Liu Yang, Qionglin Liang and Mingyu Ding; Three-dimensional hierarchical porous graphene aerogel for efficient adsorption and preconcentration of chemical warfare agents, Carbon Volume122, October 2017, pages 556-563. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2017.05.031