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Hydrogen storage in activated carbon materials: Role of the nanoporous texture

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This article is published in Carbon.The article was published on 2004-12-31. It has received 253 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Nanoporous & Texture (crystalline).

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Citations
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Storage of Hydrogen, Methane, and Carbon Dioxide in Highly Porous Covalent Organic Frameworks for Clean Energy Applications

TL;DR: Findings place COFs among the most porous and the best adsorbents for hydrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

KOH activation of carbon-based materials for energy storage

TL;DR: In this article, the textural properties and surface chemistry of KOH-activated carbons depend on not only the synthesis parameters, but also different carbon sources employed including fossil/biomass-derived materials, synthetic organic polymers, and various nanostructured carbons (e.g. carbon nanotubes, carbon nanofibers, carbon aerogels, carbide-derived carbons, graphene, etc.).
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Designed synthesis of 3D covalent organic frameworks.

TL;DR: Three-dimensional covalent organic frameworks (3D COFs) were synthesized by targeting two nets based on triangular and tetrahedral nodes: ctn and bor and have high thermal stabilities and high surface areas and extremely low densities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy storage applications of activated carbons: supercapacitors and hydrogen storage

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the state-of-the-art with respect to the preparation of activated carbons, with emphasis on the more interesting recent developments that allow better control or maximization of porosity, the use of cheap and readily available precursors and tailoring of morphology.
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From Metal–Organic Framework to Nanoporous Carbon: Toward a Very High Surface Area and Hydrogen Uptake

TL;DR: In this work, with a zeolite-type metal-organic framework as both a precursor and a template and furfuryl alcohol as a second precursor, nanoporous carbon material has been prepared with an unexpectedly high surface area and considerable hydrogen storage capacity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reporting physisorption data for gas/solid systems with special reference to the determination of surface area and porosity (Recommendations 1984)

TL;DR: Mise au point comportant des definitions generales et la terminologie, la methodologie utilisee, les procedes experimentaux, les interpretations des donnees d'adsorption, les determinations de l'aire superficielle, and les donnes sur la mesoporosite et la microporosite.
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Hydrogen storage using carbon adsorbents: past, present and future

TL;DR: A review of the hydrogen adsorption studies on activated carbons can be found in this article, where the authors provide a brief history of these studies and comments on the recent experimental and theoretical investigations of the new nanostructured carbon materials.
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Hydrogen storage using physisorption – materials demands

TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of the storage capacities of a large number of different adsorbents for hydrogen at 77 K and 1 bar was presented to examine the feasibility and perspectives of transportable and reversible storage systems based on physisorption of hydrogen on adorbents.
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CO2 As an Adsorptive To Characterize Carbon Molecular Sieves and Activated Carbons

TL;DR: In this article, the pore sizes of activated carbons and carbon molecular sieves of different origins and pore size distribution were compared to N2 adsorption at 77 K at subatmospheric pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Realizing the hydrogen future: the International Energy Agency's efforts to advance hydrogen energy technologies

TL;DR: Realizing the hydrogen future: the International Energy Agnency´s effort to advance hydrogen energy technologies as mentioned in this paper is an effort to realize hydrogen future, which aims to realize a hydrogen future.
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