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1.
High dehydrogenation temperature and slow dehydrogenation kinetics impede the practical application of magnesium hydride (MgH2) serving as a potential hydrogen storage medium. In this paper, Fe–Ni catalyst modified three-dimensional graphene was added to MgH2 by ball milling to optimize the hydrogen storage performance, the impacts and mechanisms of which are systematically investigated based on the thermodynamic and kinetic analysis. The MgH2+10 wt%Fe–Ni@3DG composite system can absorb 6.35 wt% within 100 s (300 °C, 50 atm H2 pressure) and release 5.13 wt% within 500 s (300 °C, 0.5 atm H2 pressure). In addition, it can absorb 6.5 wt% and release 5.7 wt% within 10 min during 7 cycles, exhibiting excellent cycle stability without degradation. The absorption-desorption mechanism of MgH2 can be changed by the synergistic effects of the two catalyst materials, which significantly promotes the improvement of kinetic performance of dehydrogenation process and reduces the hydrogen desorption temperature.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Catalytic effects of TiH2 on hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics of MgH2 were investigated in this study. The TG analysis showed that the addition of the x wt% TiH2 exhibited lower onset temperature of 160°C which is 100°C and 190°C lower than as‐milled and as‐received MgH2. The dehydrogenation and hydrogenation kinetics were significantly improved compared with the pure MgH2. The activation energy for the hydrogen desorption of MgH2 was reduced from ?137.13 to ?77.58 kJ/mol by the addition of TiH2. XRD and XPS results showed that the phase of TiH2 remained same during the dehydrogenation without any intermediate formation confirming its role as catalyst.  相似文献   

4.
Mg-based materials as potential hydrogen storage candidates, however, are suffering from sluggish kinetics during absorption and desorption processes. Here in this work, embedding Mg particles on few-layer graphene nanosheets (FLG) via dielectric barrier discharge plasma (DBDP) assisted milling was synthesized to improve hydrogen storage properties of Mg particles. The SEM observation demonstrates that Mg particles are distributed uniformly on the surface of the graphite layer in the Mg@FLG composite. The obtained Mg-based composite (Mg@FLG) shows a hydrogen storage capacity of ~5 wt%. From the isothermal dehydrogenation kinetic curves, the composite could desorb ~4.5 wt% hydrogen within 25 min at 300 °C. Compared with pure Mg, the dehydriding kinetics of the hydrogenated Mg@FLG composite is significantly elevated, showing an activation energy of 155 J/(mol·K). In addition, the dehydrogenation peak temperature of the Mg@FLG decreases dramatically from 431 to 329 °C for MgH2. This work implies a promising composite formation technique in Mg-based materials to enhance hydrogen storage kinetics.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Herein, a novel flower-like Ni MOF with good thermostability is introduced into MgH2 for the first time, and which demonstrates excellent catalytic activity on improving hydrogen storage performance of MgH2. The peak dehydrogenation temperature of MgH2-5 wt.% Ni MOF is 78 °C lower than that of pure MgH2. Besides, MgH2-5 wt.% Ni MOF shows faster de/hydrogenation kinetics, releasing 6.4 wt% hydrogen at 300 °C within 600 s and restoring about 5.7 wt% hydrogen at 150 °C after dehydrogenation. The apparent activation energy for de/hydrogenation reactions are calculated to be 107.8 and 42.8 kJ/mol H2 respectively, which are much lower than that of MgH2 doped with other MOFs. In addition, the catalytic mechanism of flower-like Ni MOF is investigated in depth, through XRD, XPS and TEM methods. The high catalytic activity of flower-like Ni MOF can be attributed to the combining effect of in-situ generated Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4, MgO nanoparticles, amorphous C and remaining layered Ni MOF. This research extends the knowledge of elaborating efficient catalysts via MOFs in hydrogen storage materials.  相似文献   

7.
The high dehydrogenation temperature of magnesium-based hydride (MgH2) is still a challenge as a potential hydrogen storage material in automobile applications. To improve the hydrogen desorption properties of MgH2; we selected TiFe0.8Mn0.2, graphite and Fe as additives. We prepared the Mg–graphite, Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–Fe, Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–graphite, Mg–Fe–graphite and Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–Fe–graphite composites with high-energy ball milling under argon atmosphere. We investigated the effects of graphite and Fe addition to the desorption mechanism of TiFe0.8Mn0.2 using X-ray diffractometer (XRD), scanning electron microscope, differential scanning calorimeter and pressure-composition-temperature measurements using Sievert apparatus. We observed MgH2 in Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–graphite, Mg–Fe–graphite and Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–Fe–graphite with XRD analyses after hydrogenation at 200 °C under a hydrogen pressure of 2.5–2.6 MPa. As compared to pure milled MgH2 powder, we found that the dehydrogenation peak temperatures are decreased by 90, 160 and 165 °Cfor Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–graphite, Mg–Fe–graphite, and Mg–TiFe0.8Mn0.2–Fe–graphite composites, respectively. The co-addition of TiFe0.8Mn0.2, graphite, and Fe exhibit the synergistic effects in improving the hydrogen desorption properties of MgH2.  相似文献   

8.
Mg hydride is a competitive candidates for hydrogen storage based on its high gravimetric hydrogen capacity and accessibility. In this study, a small amount of KOH and graphene were added into MgH2 by high energy ball milling. MgH2 doped with both KOH and graphene has a greatly improved hydrogen storage performance. The existence of graphene and the in-situ formed KMgH3 and MgO decreased activation energy of MgH2 to 109.89 ± 6.03 kJ/mol. The both KOH and graphene doped sample has a reversibly capacity of 5.43 wt % H2 and can released H2 as much as 6.36 times and 1.84 times faster than those of undoped sample and only KOH doped sample at 300 °C, respectively. The addition of graphene not only can provide more “H diffusion channels”, but also can disperse the catalyst.  相似文献   

9.
In the present study, the effect of amorphous Zr0·67Ni0.33 additive containing nano-ZrO2 on the hydrogen sorption kinetics and thermodynamics of Mg/MgH2 was investigated. The amorphous Zr0·67Ni0.33 particles prepared by mechanical alloying of stoichiometric elements were introduced into MgH2 powder through high-energy milling to produce a MgH2/Zr0·67Ni0.33 composite. Structural and morphological analyses revealed that the nanostructuring effect of the ZrO2 containing amorphous Zr0·67Ni0.33 has led to significant grain-size refinement of MgH2 to the nanometric scale. As a result, the MgH2/Zr0·67Ni0.33 composite demonstrates enhanced hydrogenation and dehydrogenation kinetics (4.0 wt%/50 s/250 °C and 5.0 wt%/4 min/325 °C, respectively). Meantime, substantially lowered enthalpies (−63.40 and 67.06 kJ/mol H2 obtained through pressure-composition-isotherm measurements) and reduced desorption temperature (~270 °C) were observed in the composite as compared to the pure MgH2, possibly due to the dissolution of Ni into MgH2 lattice during ball milling.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
This is a first report on the use of the bis(tricyclohexylphosphine)nickel (II) dichloride complex (abbreviated as NiPCy3) into MgH2 based hydrogen storage systems. Different composites were prepared by planetary ball-milling by doping MgH2 with (i) free tricyclohexylphosphine (PCy3) without or with nickel nanoparticles, (ii) different NiPCy3 contents (5–20 wt%) and (iii) nickel and iron nanoparticles with/without NiPCy3. The microstructural characterization of these composites before/after dehydrogenation was performed by TGA, XRD, NMR and SEM-EDX. Their hydrogen absorption/desorption kinetics were measured by TPD, DSC and PCT. All MgH2 composites showed much better dehydrogenation properties than the pure ball-milled MgH2. The hydrogen absorption/release kinetics of the Mg/MgH2 system were significantly enhanced by doping with only 5 wt% of NiPCy3 (0.42 wt% Ni); the mixture desorbed H2 starting at 220 °C and absorbed 6.2 wt% of H2 in 5 min at 200 °C under 30 bars of hydrogen. This remarkable storage performance was not preserved upon cycling due to the complex decomposition during the dehydrogenation process. The hydrogen storage properties of NiPCy3-MgH2 were improved and stabilized by the addition of Ni and Fe nanoparticles. The formed system released hydrogen at temperatures below 200 °C, absorbed 4 wt% of H2 in less than 5 min at 100 °C, and presented good reversible hydriding/dehydriding cycles. A study of the different storage systems leads to the conclusion that the NiPCy3 complex acts by restricting the crystal size growth of Mg/MgH2, catalyzing the H2 release, and homogeneously dispersing nickel over the Mg/MgH2 surface.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, some transition metal sulfides (TiS2, NbS2, MoS2, MnS, CoS2 and CuS) are used as catalyst to enhance the hydrogen storage behaviors of MgH2. The MgH2-sulfide composites with different sulfides addition are prepared by ball-milling. The phase composition and hydrogen storage properties are studied in detail. The results confirm that all these sulfides can significantly increase the hydrogen desorption and absorption kinetics of MgH2. The MgH2–TiS2 has the best hydrogenation and dehydrogenation kinetics, followed by the MgH2–NbS2, MgH2–MnS, MgH2–MoS2, MgH2–CoS2, MgH2–CuS and MgH2. Also, the onset dehydrogenation temperature of the MgH2–TiS2 is about 204 °C, which is lower about 126 °C than that of the MgH2. The dehydrogenation activation energy can be reduced to 50.8 kJ mol?1 when doping TiS2 in MgH2. The beneficial catalytic effects of the sulfides can be ascribed to the in-situ formation of MgS, TiH2, NbH, Mo, Mn, Mg2CoH5 and MgCu2 phases.  相似文献   

13.
In order to improve the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation properties of the Mg/MgH2 system, the nickel hydride complex NiHCl(P(C6H11)3)2 has been added in different amounts to MgH2 by planetary ball milling. The hydrogen storage properties of the formed composites were studied by different thermal analyses methods (temperature programmed desorption, calorimetric and pressure-composition-temperature analyses). The optimal amount of the nickel complex precursor was found to be of 20 wt%. It allows to homogeneously disperse 1.8 wt% of nickel active species at the surface of the Mg/MgH2 particles. After the decomposition of the complex during MgH2 dehydrogenation, the formed composite is stable upon cycling at low temperature. It can release hydrogen at 200 °C and absorb 6.3 wt% of H2 at 100 °C in less than 1 h. The significantly enhanced H2 storage properties are due to the impact of the highly dispersed nickel on both the kinetics and thermodynamics of the Mg/MgH2 system. The hydrogenation and dehydrogenation enthalpies were found to be of −65 and 63 kJ/mol H2 respectively (±75 kJ/mol H2 for pure Mg/MgH2) and the calculated apparent activation energies of the hydrogen uptake and release processes are of 22 and 127 kJ/mol H2 respectively (88 and 176 kJ/mol H2 for pure Mg/MgH2). The change in the thermodynamics observed in the formed composite is likely to be due to the formation of a Mg0.992Ni0.008 phase during dehydrogenation/hydrogenation cycling. The impact of another hydride nickel precursor in which chloride has been replaced by a borohydride ligand, namely NiH(BH4)(P(C6H11)3)2, is also reported.  相似文献   

14.
Magnesium hydroxide (MgH2) has excellent reversibility and high capacity, and is one of the most promising materials for hydrogen storage in practical applications. However, it suffers from high dehydrogenation temperature and slow sorption kinetics. Rare earth hydrides and transition metals can both significantly improve the de/hydrogenation kinetics of MgH2. In this work, MgH2–Mg2NiH4–CeH2.73 is in-situ synthesized by introducing Ni@CeO2 into MgH2. The unique coating structure of Ni@CeO2 facilitates homogeneous distribution of synergetic CeH2.73 and Mg2NiH4 catalytic sites in subsequent ball milling process. The as-fabricated composite MgH2-10 wt% Ni@CeO2 powders possess superior hydrogenation/dehydrogenation characteristics, absorbing 4.1 wt% hydrogen within 60 min at 100 °C and releasing 5.44 wt% H2 within 10 min at 350 °C. The apparent activation energy of MgH2-10 wt% Ni@CeO2 is determined to be 84.8 kJ/mol and it has favorable hydrogen cycling stability with almost no decay in capacity after 10 cycles.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrogen storage in solids of hydrides is advantageous in comparison to gaseous or liquid storage. Magnesium based materials are being studies for solid-state hydrogen storage due to their advantages of high volumetric and gravimetric hydrogen storage capacity. However, unfavorable thermodynamic and kinetic barriers hinder its practical application. In this work, we presented that kinetics of Mg-based composites were significantly improved during high energy ball milling in presence of various types of carbon, including plasma carbon produced by plasma-reforming of hydrocarbons, activated carbon, and carbon nanotubes. The improvement of the kinetics and de-/re-hydrogenation performance of MgH2 and TiC-catalysed MgH2 by introduction of carbon are strongly dependent on the milling time, amount of carbon and carbon structure. The lowest dehydrogenation temperature was observed at 180 °C by the plasma carbon–modified MgH2/TiC. We found that nanoconfinement of carbon structures stabilised Mg-based nanocomposites and hinders the nanoparticles growth and agglomeration. Plasma carbon was found to show better effects than the other two carbon structures because the plasma carbon contained both few layer graphene sheets that served as an active dispersion matrix and amorphous activated carbons that promoted the spill-over effect of TiC catalysed MgH2. The strategy in enhancing the kinetics and thermodynamics of Mg-based composites is leading to a better design of metal hydride composites for hydrogen storage.  相似文献   

16.
A bi-component catalyst TiB2/GNSs (GNSs is the abbreviation of graphene nanosheets) is synthesized by a solid-state method. Microstructural characterizations based on SEM (scanning electron microscopy), TEM (transmission electron microscopy) and N2 physisorption show that the size of TiB2/GNSs catalyst is at nanoscale (20–30 nm) with a surface area of 84.69 m2 g−1. The TiB2/GNSs nanoparticles ball milled with MgH2 and exhibit enhanced catalytic effects on the dehydrogenation properties of MgH2 compares to TiB2 and GNSs individually. DSC (differential scanning calorimetry) measurements confirm that the peak desorption temperature of MgH2-5 wt%TiB2/GNSs composites can be lowered more than 44 °C than the pure as-milled MgH2. And the dehydrogenation kinetics of TiB2/GNSs-doped MgH2 is severalfold acceleration compares to the pure as-milled MgH2. It is proposed that the TiB2/GNSs nanoparticles could significantly enhance the intimate interface between TiB2/GNSs and hydride, therefore, provide more active “catalytic sites” and H “diffusion channels” to reduce the dehydrogenation temperature and improve the dehydrogenation kinetics of MgH2. The synergistic effect of nano-GNSs and TiB2 nanoparticles contributes to the highly efficient for dehydrogenation of MgH2-5wt%TiB2/GNSs composites.  相似文献   

17.
The present investigation reports the effect of TiH2 templated over graphene (TiH2@Gr) on the hydrogen sorption characteristics of MgH2/Mg. The as synthesized TiH2@Gr leads to significant effect on sorption in MgH2 by the following effects: the first is dehydrogenation of MgH2–TiH2@Gr, which leads to the conversion of some part of TiH2 into TiH1.924. TiH2 together with TiH1.924 works as a better catalyst than TiH2 alone. The second is ball-milling of TiH2@Gr, which produces defective graphene, which also works as co-catalyst. The third is anchoring of TiH2 on graphene, which does not allow the catalyst to agglomerate. The catalytic effect of TiH2@Gr on MgH2 is found to be better than Ti@Gr and TiO2@Gr. The onset desorption temperature for MgH2–TiH2@Gr is ~204 °C, which is 31 °C and 36 °C lower than MgH2–Ti@Gr, MgH2–TiO2@Gr respectively. The better catalytic behavior of TiH2@Gr also persists during de/re-hydrogenation kinetics and cycling study of MgH2. The feasible mechanism for superior catalytic for TiH2@Gr on MgH2 has been put forward.  相似文献   

18.
To improve the hydrogen sorption kinetics of MgH2, the MoO3 nanobelts were added into MgH2 by mechanical milling, leading to fine distribution of MoO3 in the MgH2 matrix. Compared to uncatalyzed MgH2, the hydriding and dehydriding rates of MoO3-catalyzed MgH2 were significantly improved. The MgH2 doped with 2 mol% MoO3 exhibited fast dehydrogenation without activation, and the initial dehydrogenation amount of 5 wt% could be reached within 900 s at 300 °C. The dehydrogenation apparent activation energy is decreased down to 114.7 kJ/mol. The excellent catalytic effect of MoO3 originates from its specific role as fast hydrogen diffusion pathways. In the hydrogenation process, the MoO3 transformed to MoO2, resulting in the fading of catalytic activity.  相似文献   

19.
Extensive researches are being conducted to improve the high dehydrogenation temperature and sluggish hydrogen release rate of magnesium hydride (MgH2) for better industrial application. In this study, LiNbO3, a catalyst composed of alkali metal Li and transition metal Nb, was prepared through a direct one-step hydrothermal synthesis, which remarkably improved the hydrogen storage performance of MgH2. With the addition of 6 wt% LiNbO3 in MgH2, the initial dehydrogenation temperature decreases from 300 °C to 228 °C, representing a drop of almost 72 °C compared to milled MgH2. Additionally, the MgH2-6 wt.% LiNbO3 composite can quickly release 5.45 wt% of H2 within 13 min at 250 °C, and absorbed about 3.5 wt% of H2 within 30 min at 100 °C. It is also note that LiNbO3 shows better catalytic effect compared to solely adding Li2O or Nb2O5. Furthermore, the activation energy of MgH2-6 wt.% LiNbO3 decreased by 44.37% compared to milled MgH2. The enhanced hydrogen storage performance of MgH2 is attributed to the in situ formation of Nb-based oxides in the presence of LiNbO3, which creates a multielement and multivalent chemical environment.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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