Synthesis of Carbon-Nitrogen-Phosphorous Materials with an Unprecedented High Amount of Phosphorous toward an Efficient Fire-Retardant Material
Résumé
Phosphorus incorporation into carbon can greatly modify its chemical, electronic, and thermal stability properties. To date this has been limited to low levels of phosphorus. Now a simple, large‐scale synthesis of carbon–nitrogen–phosphorus (CNP) materials is reported with tunable elemental composition, leading to excellent thermal stability to oxidation and fire‐retardant properties. The synthesis consists of using monomers that are liquid at high temperatures as the reaction precursors. The molten‐state stage leads to good monomer miscibility and enhanced reactivity at high temperatures and formation of CNP materials with up to 32 wt % phosphorus incorporation. The CNP composition and fire‐retardant properties can be tuned by modifying the starting monomers ratio and the final calcination temperature. The CNP materials demonstrate great resistance to oxidation and excellent fire‐retardant properties, with up to 90 % of the materials preserved upon heating to 800 °C in air.
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2018_Zhang-Angewandte_HAL.pdf (2.53 Mo)
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2018_Zhang-Angewandte_SI.pdf (2.88 Mo)
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