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1.
The hydrogen absorption and desorption properties of a MgH2 – 1 mol.% Nb(V) ethoxide mixture are reported. The material was prepared by hand mixing the additive with previously ball-milled MgH2. Nb ethoxide reacts with MgH2 during heating, releasing C2H6 and H2, and producing MgO and Nb or Nb hydride. Hydriding and dehydriding are greatly enhanced by the use of the alkoxide. At 250 °C the material with Nb takes up 1.8 wt% in 30 s compared with 0.1 wt% of pure Mg, and releases 4.2 wt% in 30 min, whereas MgH2 without Nb does not appreciably desorb hydrogen. The absorption and desorption activation energies are reduced from 153 kJ/mol H2 to 94 kJ/mol H2, and from 176 kJ/mol H2 to 75 kJ/mol H2, respectively. The hydrogen sorption properties remain stable after 10 cycles at 300 °C. The kinetic improvement is attributed to the fine distribution of amorphous/nanometric NbHx achieved by the dispersion of the liquid additive.  相似文献   

2.
In the present investigation, we have reported the synergistic effect of Fe nanoparticles and hollow carbon spheres composite on the hydrogen storage properties of MgH2. The onset desorption temperature for MgH2 catalyzed with hollow carbon spheres and Fe nanoparticle (MgH2-Fe-HCS) system has been observed to be 225.9 °C with a hydrogen storage capacity of 5.60 wt %. It could be able to absorb 5.60 wt % hydrogen within 55 s and desorb 5.50 wt % hydrogen within 12 min under 20 atm H2 pressure at 300 °C. The desorption activation energy of MgH2-Fe-HCS has been found to be 84.9 kJ/mol, whereas the desorption activation energies for as received MgH2, Hollow carbon sphere catalyzed MgH2 and Fe catalyzed MgH2 are found to be 130 kJ/mol, 103 kJ/mol, and 94.2 kJ/mol respectively. MgH2-Fe-HCS composite lowered the change in enthalpy of hydrogen desorption from MgH2 by 20.02 kJ/mol as compared to pristine MgH2. MgH2-Fe-HCS shows better cyclability up to 24 cycles of hydrogenation and dehydrogenation of MgH2. The mechanism for the better catalytic action of Fe and HCS on MgH2 has also been discussed.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, a low-cost biomass charcoal (BC)-based nickel catalyst (Ni/BC) was introduced into the MgH2 system by ball-milling. The study demonstrated that the Ni/BC catalyst significantly improved the hydrogen desorption and absorption kinetics of MgH2. The MgH2 + 10 wt% Ni/BC-3 composite starts to release hydrogen at 187.8 °C, which is 162.2 °C lower than the initial dehydrogenation temperature of pure MgH2. Besides, 6.04 wt% dehydrogenation can be achieved within 3.5 min at 300 °C. After the dehydrogenation is completed, MgH2 + 10 wt% Ni/BC-3 can start to absorb hydrogen even at 30 °C, which achieved the absorption of 5 wt% H2 in 60 min under the condition of 3 MPa hydrogen pressure and 125 °C. The apparent activation energies of dehydrogenation and hydrogen absorption of MgH2 + 10 wt% Ni/BC-3 composites were 82.49 kJ/mol and 23.87 kJ/mol lower than those of pure MgH2, respectively, which indicated that the carbon layer wrapped around MgH2 effectively improved the cycle stability of hydrogen storage materials. Moreover, MgH2 + 10 wt% Ni/BC-3 can still maintain 99% hydrogen storage capacity after 20 cycles. XRD, EDS, SEM and TEM revealed that the Ni/BC catalyst evenly distributed around MgH2 formed Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4 in situ, which act as a “hydrogen pump” to boost the diffusion of hydrogen along with the Mg/MgH2 interface. Meanwhile, the carbon layer with fantastic conductivity enormously accelerated the electron transfer. Consequently, there is no denying that the synergistic effect extremely facilitated the hydrogen absorption and desorption kinetic performance of MgH2.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of CuFe2O4 addition on the sorption performances of MgH2 prepared by ball milling was studied for the first time. The MgH2 + 10 wt% CuFe2O4 sample exhibited an enhancement in hydrogen storage performance compared to that of as-milled MgH2, with the onset decomposition temperature decreased from 340 °C to 250 °C. Dehydrogenation kinetic result revealed that CuFe2O4-added MgH2 released around 5.3 wt% H2 within 10 min at 320 °C, while the as-milled MgH2 released below 1.0 wt% H2 under the same condition. Furthermore, about 5.0 wt% H2 was absorbed at 250 °C in 30 min for the 10 wt% CuFe2O4-doped MgH2 sample. In contrast, the un-doped MgH2 only absorbed 4.0 wt% H2 at 250 °C in 30 min. From the Kissinger analysis, the apparent activation energy of as-milled MgH2 was 166.0 kJ/mol and this value decreased to 113.0 kJ/mol for 10 wt% CuFe2O4-added MgH2. The enhanced sorption performance of MgH2 in the presence of CuFe2O4 is believed to be due to the role of in situ formed Fe, Mg-Cu alloy, and MgO phases as an active species to catalyse the hydrogen storage properties of MgH2.  相似文献   

5.
Magnesium hydride (MgH2) is the most prominent carrier for storing hydrogen in solid-state mode. However, their slow kinetics and high thermodynamics become an obstacle in hydrogen storage. The present study elaborates on the catalytic effect of graphene (Gr) and vanadium disulfide (VS2) on MgH2 to enhance its hydrogen sorption kinetic. The temperature-programmed desorption study shows that the onset desorption temperature of MgH2 catalyzed by VS2 and MgH2 catalyzed by Gr is 289 °C and 300 °C, respectively. These desorption temperatures are 87 °C and 76 °C lower than the desorption temperature of pristine MgH2. The rapid rehydrogenation kinetics for the MgH2 catalyzed by VS2 have been found at a temperature of 300 °C under 15 atm H2 pressure by absorbing ∼4.04 wt% of hydrogen within 1 min, whereas the MgH2 catalyzed by Gr takes ∼3 min for absorbing the same amount of hydrogen under the similar temperature and pressure conditions. The faster release of hydrogen was also observed in MgH2 catalyzed by VS2 than MgH2 catalyzed by Gr and pristine MgH2. MgH2 catalyzed by VS2 releases ∼2.54 wt% of hydrogen within 10 min, while MgH2 catalyzed by Gr takes ∼30 min to release the same amount of hydrogen. Furthermore, MgH2 catalyzed by VS2 also persists in the excellent cyclic stability and reversibility up to 25 cycles.  相似文献   

6.
In the present study, the catalyst anatase titanium dioxide (TiO2) quantum dots (QDs) of size ∼ (2.50–4.00)nm was successfully synthesized by the hydrothermal method. The formation of TiO2: QDs has been established by UV–Vis spectroscopy and confirmed by transmission electron microscopy. Here, we report the catalytic action of TiO2:QDs on de/re-hydrogenation properties of magnesium hydride (MgH2/Mg). By catalyzing MgH2 through this catalyst, the onset desorption temperature of MgH2 gets reduced significantly from ∼360 °C (for ball-milled MgH2) to ∼260 °C. Moreover, the Mg-TiO2: QDs sample absorbed a significant amount of hydrogen up to ∼6.10 wt% in just 77sec at 280 °C. Improved rehydrogenation kinetics has been found even at lower temperatures by absorbing ∼5.30 wt% in 74 s at 225 °C and ∼5.0 wt% of hydrogen in 30 min at 100 °C. Based on structural,.microstructural, and XPS investigations, a feasible mechanism for improved hydrogen sorption and cyclic stability in MgH2 catalyzed with TiO2:QDs has been explained and discussed. To our knowledge, no studies have been carried out on the sorption of hydrogen in MgH2 catalyzed by TiO2:QDs.  相似文献   

7.
Currently, magnesium hydride (MgH2) as a solid-state hydrogen storage material has become the subject of major research owing to its good reversibility, large hydrogen storage capacity (7.6 wt%) and affordability. However, MgH2 has a high decomposition temperature (>400 °C) and slow desorption and absorption kinetics. In this work, BaMnO3 was synthesized using the solid-state method and was used as an additive to overcome the drawbacks of MgH2. Interestingly, after adding 10 wt% of BaMnO3, the initial desorption temperature of MgH2 decreased to 282 °C, which was 138 °C lower than that of pure MgH2 and 61 °C lower than that of milled MgH2. For absorption kinetics, at 250 °C in 2 min, 10 wt% of BaMnO3-doped MgH2 absorbed 5.22 wt% of H2 compared to milled MgH2 (3.48 wt%). Conversely, the desorption kinetics also demonstrated that 10 wt% of BaMnO3-doped MgH2 samples desorbed 5.36 wt% of H2 at 300 °C within 1 h whereas milled MgH2 only released less than 0.32 wt% of H2. The activation energy was lowered by 45 kJ/mol compared to that of MgH2 after the addition of 10 wt% of BaMnO3. Further analyzed by using XRD revealed that the formation of Mg0·9Mn0·1O, Mn3O4 and Ba or Ba-containing enhanced the performance of MgH2.  相似文献   

8.
Transition metal-based oxides have been proven to have a substantial catalytic influence on boosting the hydrogen sorption performance of MgH2. Herein, the catalytic action of Ni6MnO8@rGO nanocomposite in accelerating the hydrogen sorption properties of MgH2 was investigated. The MgH2 + 5 wt% Ni6MnO8@rGO composites began delivering H2 at 218 °C, with about 2.7 wt%, 5.4 wt%, and 6.6 wt% H2 released within 10 min at 265 °C, 275 °C, and 300 °C, respectively. For isothermal hydrogenation at 75 °C and 100 °C, the dehydrogenated MgH2 + 5 wt% Ni6MnO8@rGO sample could absorb 1.0 wt% and 3.3 wt% H2 in 30 min, respectively. Moreover, as compared to addition-free MgH2, the de/rehydrogenation activation energies for doped MgH2 composites were lowered to 115 ± 11 kJ/mol and 38 ± 7 kJ/mol, and remarkable cyclic stability was reported after 20 cycles. Microstructure analysis revealed that the in-situ formed Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4, Mn, MnO2, and reduced graphene oxide synergically enhanced the hydrogen de/absorption properties of the Mg/MgH2 system.  相似文献   

9.
This paper reports the catalytic effects of mischmetal (Mm) and mischmetal oxide (Mm-oxide) on improving the dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation behaviour of magnesium hydride (MgH2). It has been found that 5 wt.% is the optimum catalyst (Mm/Mm-oxide) concentration for MgH2. The Mm and Mm-oxide catalyzed MgH2 exhibits hydrogen desorption at significantly lower temperature and also fast rehydrogenation kinetics compared to ball-milled MgH2 under identical conditions of temperature and pressure. The onset desorption temperature for MgH2 catalyzed with Mm and Mm-oxide are 323 °C and 305 °C, respectively. Whereas the onset desorption temperature for the ball-milled MgH2 is 381 °C. Thus, there is a lowering of onset desorption temperature by 58 °C for Mm and by 76 °C for Mm-oxide. The dehydrogenation activation energy of Mm-oxide catalyzed MgH2 is 66 kJ/mol. It is 35 kJ/mol lower than ball-milled MgH2. Additionally, the Mm-oxide catalyzed dehydrogenated Mg exhibits faster rehydrogenation kinetics. It has been noticed that in the first 10 min, the Mm-oxide catalyzed Mg (dehydrogenated MgH2) has absorbed up to 4.75 wt.% H2 at 315 °C under 15 atmosphere hydrogen pressure. The activation energy determined for the rehydrogenation of Mm-oxide catalyzed Mg is ∼62 kJ/mol, whereas that for the ball-milled Mg alone is ∼91 kJ/mol. Thus, there is a decrease in absorption activation energy by ∼29 kJ/mol for the Mm-oxide catalyzed Mg. In addition, Mm-oxide is the native mixture of CeO2 and La2O3 which makes the duo a better catalyst than CeO2, which is known to be an effective catalyst for MgH2. This takes place due to the synergistic effect of CeO2 and La2O3. It can thus be said that Mm-oxide is an effective catalyst for improving the hydrogen sorption behaviour of MgH2.  相似文献   

10.
Previous studies have shown that ferrites give a positive effect in improving the hydrogen sorption properties of magnesium hydride (MgH2). In this study, another ferrite, i.e., BaFe12O19, has been successfully synthesised via the solid state method, and it was milled with MgH2 to enhance the sorption kinetics. The result showed that the MgH2 + 10 wt% BaFe12O19 sample started to release hydrogen at about 270 °C which is about 70 °C lower than the as-milled MgH2. The doped sample was able to absorb hydrogen for 4.3 wt% in 10 min at 150 °C, while as-milled MgH2 only absorbed 3.5 wt% of hydrogen under similar conditions. The desorption kinetic results showed that the doped sample released about 3.5 wt% of hydrogen in 15 min at 320 °C, while the as-milled MgH2 only released about 1.5 wt% of hydrogen. From the Kissinger plot, the apparent activation energy of the BaFe12O19-doped MgH2 sample was 115 kJ/mol which was lower than the milled MgH2 (141 kJ/mol). Further analyses demonstrated that MgO, Fe and Ba or Ba-containing contribute to the improvement by serving as active species, thus enhancing the MgH2 for hydrogen storage.  相似文献   

11.
In order to improve the hydrogen storage performance of MgH2, graphene and CeF3 co-catalyzed MgH2 (hereafter denoted as MgH2+CeF3@Gn) were prepared by wet method ball milling and hydriding, which is a simple and time-saving method. The effect of CeF3@Gn on the hydrogen storage behavior of MgH2 was investigated. The experimental results showed that co-addition of CeF3@Gn greatly decreased the hydrogen desorption/absorption temperature of MgH2, and remarkably improved the dehydriding/hydriding kinetics of MgH2. The onset hydrogen desorption temperature of Mg + CeF3@Gn is 232 °C,which is 86 °C lower than that of as-milled undoped MgH2, and its hydrogen desorption capacity reaches 6.77 wt%, which is 99% of its theoretical capacity (6.84 wt%). At 300 °C and 200 °C the maximum hydrogen desorption rates are 79.5 and 118 times faster than that of the as-milled undoped MgH2. Even at low temperature of 150 °C, the dedydrided sample (Mg + CeF3@Gn) also showed excellent hydrogen absorption kinetics, it can absorb 5.71 wt% hydrogen within 50 s, and its maximum hydrogen absorption rate reached 15.0 wt% H2/min, which is 1765 times faster than that of the undoped Mg. Moreover, no eminent degradation of hydrogen storage capacity occurred after 15 hydrogen desorption/absorption cycles. Mg + CeF3@Gn showed excellent hydrogen de/absorption kinetics because of the MgF2 and CeH2-3 that are formed in situ, and the synergic catalytic effect of these by-products and unique structure of Gn.  相似文献   

12.
The chain-like carbon nanotubes (CNTs) decorated with CoFeB (CoFeB/CNTs) prepared by oxidation-reduction method is introduced into MgH2 to facilitate its hydrogen storage performance. The addition of CoFeB/CNTs enables MgH2 to start desorbing hydrogen at only 177 °C. Whereas pure MgH2 starts hydrogen desorption at 310 °C. The dehydrogenation apparent activation energy of MgH2 in CoFeB/CNTs doped-MgH2 composite is only 83.2 kJ/mol, and this is about 59.5 kJ/mol lower than that of pure MgH2. In addition, the completely dehydrogenated MgH2−10 wt% CoFeB/CNTs sample can start to absorb hydrogen at only 30 °C. At 150 °C and 5 MPa H2, the MgH2 in CoFeB/CNTs doped-MgH2 composite can absorb 6.2 wt% H2 in 10 min. The cycling kinetics can remain rather stable up to 20 cycles, and the hydrogen storage capacity retention rate is 98.5%. The in situ formation of Co3MgC, Fe, CoFe and B caused by the introduction of CoFeB/CNTs can provide active and nucleation sites for the dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation reactions of MgH2. Moreover, CNTs can provide hydrogen diffusion pathways while also enhancing the thermal conductivity of the sample. All of these can facilitate the dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation performance and cyclic stability of MgH2.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, the hydrogen storage properties of MgH2 with the addition of K2TiF6 were investigated for the first time. The temperature-programmed desorption results showed that the addition of 10 wt% K2TiF6 to the MgH2 exhibited a lower onset desorption temperature of 245 °C, which was a decrease of about 105 °C and 205 °C compared with the as-milled and as-received MgH2, respectively. The dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation kinetics of 10 wt% K2TiF6-doped MgH2 were also significantly improved compared to the un-doped MgH2. The results of the Arrhenius plot showed that the activation energy for the hydrogen desorption of MgH2 was reduced from 164 kJ/mol to 132 kJ/mol after the addition of 10 wt% K2TiF6. Meanwhile, the X-ray diffraction analysis showed the formation of a new phase of potassium hydride and titanium hydride together with magnesium fluoride and titanium in the doped MgH2 after the dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation process. It is reasonable to conclude that the K2TiF6 additive doped with MgH2 played a catalytic role through the formation of active species of KH, TiH2, MgF2 and Ti during the ball milling or heating process. It is therefore proposed that this newly developed product works as a real catalyst for improving the hydrogen sorption properties of MgH2.  相似文献   

14.
MgH2-based nanocomposites were synthesized by high-energy reactive ball milling (RBM) of Mg powder with 0.5–5 mol% of various catalytic additives (nano-Ti, nano-TiO2, and Ti4Fe2Ox suboxide powders) in hydrogen. The additives were shown to facilitate hydrogenation of magnesium during RBM and substantially improve its hydrogen absorption-desorption kinetics. X-ray diffraction analysis showed the formation of nanocrystalline MgH2 and hydrogenation of nano-Ti and Ti4Fe2Ox. The possible reduction of TiO2 during RBM in hydrogen was not observed, which is in agreement with lower hydrogenation capacity of the corresponding composite, 5.7 wt% for Mg + 5 mol% nano-TiO2 compared to 6.5 wt% for Mg + 5 mol% nano-Ti. Hydrogen desorption from the as-prepared composites was studied by Thermal Desorption Spectroscopy (TDS) in vacuum. A significant lowering of the hydrogen desorption temperature of MgH2 by 30–90 °C in the presence of the additives is associated with lowering activation energy from 146 kJ/mol for nanosized MgH2 down to 74 and 67 kJ/mol for MgH2 modified with nano-TiO2 and Ti4Fe2O0.3 additives, respectively. After hydrogen desorption at 300–350 °C, these materials are able to absorb hydrogen even at room temperature. It is shown that nano-structuring and addition of Ti-based catalysts do not decrease thermodynamic stability of MgH2. The thermodynamic parameters, obtained from hydrogen desorption isotherms for the Mg–Ti4Fe2O0.3 nanocomposite, ΔHdes = 76 kJ/mol H2 and ΔSdes = 138 J/K·mol H2, correspond to the reported literature values for pure polycrystalline MgH2. Hydrogen absorption-desorption characteristics of the composites with nano-Ti remain stable during at least 25 cycles, while a gradual decay of the reversible hydrogen capacity occurred in the case of TiO2 and Ti4Fe2Ox additives. Cycling stability of Mg/Ti4Fe2Ox was substantially improved by introduction of 3 wt% graphite into the composite.  相似文献   

15.
Magnesium hydride (MgH2) is the best candidate material to store hydrogen in the solid-state form owing to its advantages such as good reversibility, high hydrogen storage capacity (7.6 wt%), low raw material cost and abundance in the earth. Nevertheless, slow desorption/absorption kinetics and high thermodynamic stability are two issues that have constrained the commercialization of MgH2 as a solid-state hydrogen storage material. So, to boost the desorption/absorption kinetics and to alter the thermodynamics of MgH2, hafnium tetrachloride (HfCl4) was used as a catalyst in this study. Different percentages of HfCl4 (5, 10, 15 and 20 wt%) were added to MgH2 and their catalytic influences on the hydrogen storage properties of MgH2 were investigated. Results showed that the 15 wt% HfCl4-doped MgH2 sample was the best composite to enhance the hydrogen storage performance of MgH2. The onset decomposition temperature of the 15 wt% HfCl4-doped MgH2 composite was decreased by ~75 °C compared to as-milled MgH2. Meanwhile, the desorption/absorption kinetic measurements showed an improvement compared to the undoped MgH2. From the Kissinger analysis, the apparent dehydrogenation activation energy was 167.0 kJ/mol for undoped MgH2 and 102.0 kJ/mol for 15 wt% HfCl4-doped MgH2. This shows that the HfCl4 addition reduced the activation energy of the hydrogen decomposition of MgH2. The desorption enthalpy change calculated by the van't Hoff equation showed that the addition of HfCl4 to MgH2 did not affect the thermodynamic properties. Scanning electron microscopy showed that the size of the MgH2 particles decreased and there was less agglomeration after the addition of HfCl4. It is believed that the decrease in the particle size and in-situ generated MgCl2 and Hf-containing species had synergistic catalytic effects on enhancing the hydrogen storage properties of the HfCl4-doped MgH2 composite.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of MnFe2O4 nanopowder synthesised via a simple ‘hydrothermal’ method on the hydrogen storage properties of MgH2 are investigated for the first time. The particle size of the as-synthesised MnFe2O4 nanoparticles is determined to be about 10 nm. We observe that MnFe2O4 catalyst decreases the decomposition temperature of MgH2 and enhances the sorption kinetics. Interestingly, the onset hydrogen desorption temperature of 10 wt% MnFe2O4-doped MgH2 sample gets lowered from 350 °C to 240 °C with faster kinetics, and the sample shows an average dehydrogenation rate 8–9 times faster than that of the as-milled MgH2 sample. By adding 10 wt% of as-prepared MnFe2O4 to MgH2, approximately 5.5 wt% hydrogen can be absorbed in 10 min at 200 °C. In contrast, the un-doped MgH2 sample absorbed only 4.0 wt% hydrogen in the same period of time. From the Kissinger analysis, the apparent activation energy for hydrogen released in the MnFe2O4-added MgH2 composite is found to be 108.42 kJ/mol, which is much lower than the activation energy for hydrogen released in the as-milled MgH2 (146.57 kJ/mol). It is believed that the in situ formed Fe particle and Mn-containing phases together play a synergistic role in remarkably improving MgH2 storage properties.  相似文献   

17.
Magnesium hydride is a leading hydrogen storage material with high hydrogen content, however, suffers with sluggish kinetics. Several methods have been adopted to improve its kinetics, out of which, the addition of catalyst is an impressive way. Carbon materials have shown their promises as catalyst for several hydrogen storage materials. The present work is devoted to investigating the catalytic effects of exfoliated graphite and graphene nanoballs on dehydrogenation kinetics of MgH2. The lowest onset temperature of 282 °C is observed for graphene nanoballs modified MgH2 system. Exfoliated graphite mixed MgH2 desorbed hydrogen at onset temperature 301 °C which is also less than the dehydrogenation temperature of pure MgH2 (410 °C). The dehydrogenation kinetics has significantly improved by the addition of these catalysts as compared to the pure MgH2. The activation energy for the hydrogen desorption of MgH2 was reduced from 170 (pure MgH2) to 136 ± 2 and 140 ± 2 kJ/mol by the addition of exfoliated graphite and graphene nanoballs, respectively. The XRD results confirmed the presence of MgH2 after milling with exfoliated graphite and graphene nanoballs that indicates that there are no reactions during the milling thus both the additives are effective to improve the dehydrogenation as a catalyst.  相似文献   

18.
Hydrogen desorption kinetic parameters of MgH2 compounds were measured and compared with published gas solid reaction models. The compounds investigated in this study were as-received MgH2, ball milled MgH2, and MgH2 ball milled with 9Ni–2Mg–Y catalyst compound. It was determined that different models were necessary to fit the hydrogen desorption data collected at different temperatures on the same sample, indicating that desorption mechanisms changed with respect to temperature. Addition of (9Ni–2Mg–Y) alloy as a catalyst to MgH2 increased the hydrogen desorption capacity of MgH2 from zero (for as-received MgH2) to about 5 wt% at 350 °C within 500 s. The activation energy value was determined as 187 kJ/mol H2 for the as-received MgH2, 137 kJ/mol H2 for 20 h ball milled MgH2, and 62 kJ/mol H2 for 20 h ball milled MgH2-10 wt% (9Ni–2Mg–Y) nano-composite by the Arrhenius and Kissinger methods. Moreover, the integral heat of H2 desorption for the MgH2-10 wt% (9Ni–2Mg–Y) nano-composite was measured to be about 78 ± 0.5 kJ/mol H2 by adsorption micro-calorimetry consistent with the results of the Arrhenius and Kissinger methods.  相似文献   

19.
MgH2 is one of the most promising hydrogen storage materials due to its high capacity and low cost. In an effort to develop MgH2 with a low dehydriding temperature and fast sorption kinetics, doping MgH2 with NiCl2 and CoCl2 has been investigated in this paper. Both the dehydrogenation temperature and the absorption/desorption kinetics have been improved by adding either NiCl2 or CoCl2, and a significant enhancement was obtained in the case of the NiCl2 doped sample. For example, a hydrogen absorption capacity of 5.17 wt% was reached at 300 °C in 60 s for the MgH2/NiCl2 sample. In contrast, the ball-milled MgH2 just absorbed 3.51 wt% hydrogen at 300 °C in 400 s. An activation energy of 102.6 kJ/mol for the MgH2/NiCl2 sample has been obtained from the desorption data, 18.7 kJ/mol and 55.9 kJ/mol smaller than those of the MgH2/CoCl2, which also exhibits an enhanced kinetics, and of the pure MgH2 sample, respectively. In addition, the enhanced kinetics was observed to persist even after 9 cycles in the case of the NiCl2 doped MgH2 sample. Further kinetic investigation indicated that the hydrogen desorption from the milled MgH2 is controlled by a slow, random nucleation and growth process, which is transformed into two-dimensional growth after NiCl2 or CoCl2 doping, suggesting that the additives reduced the barrier and lowered the driving forces for nucleation.  相似文献   

20.
A study to determine the optimal content of Nb(V) ethoxide required to efficiently catalyze the H2 sorption kinetics in the Mg/MgH2 system is reported. The materials were synthesized by hand mixing different amounts of additive (from 0.10 to 1 mol%) to pre-milled MgH2. Considering kinetics and capacity the best performance corresponds to a 0.25 mol% of Nb ethoxide concentration. With this material, a remarkable kinetic behavior with excellent reversibility is obtained: 5.3 wt% and 5.1 wt% of hydrogen are absorbed and desorbed respectively at 300 °C in 3 min. At 250 °C the material absorbs 5.2 wt% of hydrogen and releases 3.7 wt% in 10 min. Thermal desorption starts at 247 °C and peaks at 268 °C. The H2 sorption properties of all the materials remain unchanged after 10 cycles of absorption and desorption at 300 °C, and the best material reversibly takes in and releases 5.3 wt% of H2 during a 10 min combined cycle. The kinetic improvement of the hydrogen desorption and absorption properties is attributed to an enhancement of the kinetic processes that occur on the surface of the material, due to the excellent spreading of the liquid additive at nanometric level, as revealed by SEM/EDS and TEM/EELS.  相似文献   

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