首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Carbon-based materials have been proposed as an ideal medium to reduce the reaction energy barriers and improve the (de)hydrogenation kinetics of magnesium-based hydrogen storage material (MgH2) in term of their excellent dispersion. However, tedious preparation process and uneven distribution of carbon restrict the application. Therefore, in this paper, we cover MgH2 by in-situ formed amorphous carbon via a facile approach of co-sintering Mg with fluorene followed by hydriding combustion and ball milling processes, named as MgH2-carbonization product of fluorene (MgH2-CPF). As a result, the MgH2-CPF composite prepared at 823 K initially dehydrogenates at 557 K, 94 K lower than the as-milled MgH2 (651 K). Meanwhile, the composite can release 5.67 wt% H2 within 1000 s at 623 K. Even at a lower temperature of 423 K, the MgH2-CPF composite still reabsorbs 5.62 wt% H2 within 3600 s, while the as-milled Mg can hardly absorb hydrogen under a same condition. Furthermore, by addition of CPF, the apparent activation energy of the system is decreased from 161.2 kJ/mol to 87.2 kJ/mol. Our finding suggests that the carbon layer can keep the MgH2 from aggregation, promote hydrogen transport and improve the efficiency of hydrogen absorption and desorption.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
We describe the synthesis of MgH2 using autocatalytic effect of MgH2. The MgH2 was synthesized by ball milling Mg with 5 wt% of MgH2. The ball milling was carried out at different pressures of 15, 30 and 45 atm of H2 followed by heat treatment (heating under vacuum and annealing at 30 atm of H2 pressure (at 350 °C) for 10 h). It has been found that the MgH2 synthesized using 30 atm of H2 pressure during ball milling, followed by heat treatment and annealing (MgH230BM) is the optimum material as it has lowest desorption temperature (325 °C) faster rehydrogenation kinetic (6.60 wt% within 30 min at 300 °C and 20 atm hydrogen pressure). Also MgH230BM maintains the storage capacity of more than 6.00 wt% (loss of 0.6 wt%) after 10 cycles of de/re-hydrogenation. The as synthesized MgH2 has superior de/re-hydrogenation properties and is ∼4 times cheaper as compared to MgH2 procured from the chemical company like Alfa-Aesar. It is to be mentioned that under above mentioned temperature and pressure conditions the stand alone Mg (without having MgH2 as catalyst) doesnot at all converts to MgH2. The present study opens the gateway for economical synthesis of MgH2 at large scale.  相似文献   

4.
Magnesium-based hydrogen storage materials (MgH2) are promising hydrogen carrier due to the high gravimetric hydrogen density; however, the undesirable thermodynamic stability and slow kinetics restrict its utilization. In this work, we assist the de/hydrogenation of MgH2 via in situ formed additives from the conversion of an MgNi2 alloy upon de/hydrogenation. The MgH2–16.7 wt%MgNi2 composite was synthesized by ball milling of Mg powder and MgNi2 alloy followed by a hydrogen combustion synthesis method, where most of the Mg converted to MgH2, and the others reacted with the MgNi2 generating Mg2NiH4, which produced in situ Mg2Ni during dehydrogenation. Results showed that the Mg2Ni and Mg2NiH4 could induce hydrogen absorption and desorption of the MgH2, that it absorbed 2.5 wt% H2 at 473 K, much higher than that of pure Mg, and the dehydrogenation capacity increased by 2.6 wt% at 573 K. Besides, the initial dehydrogenation temperature of the composite under the promotion of Mg2NiH4 decreased greatly by 100 K, whereas it is 623 K for MgH2. Furthermore, benefiting from the catalyst effect of Mg2NiH4 during dehydrogenation, the apparent activation energy of the composite reduced to 73.2 kJ mol−1 H2 from 129.5 kJ mol−1 H2.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
This study aims to better understand the Fe role in the hydrogen sorption kinetics of Mg–Fe composites. Mg-8 mol% Fe nanocomposites produced by high energy reactive milling (RM) for 10 h resulted in MgH2 mixed with free Fe and a low fraction of Mg2FeH6. Increasing milling time to 24 h allowed formation of a high fraction of Mg2FeH6 mixed with MgH2. The hydrogen absorption/desorption behavior of the nanocomposites reactive milled for 10 and 24 h was investigated by in-situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction, thermal analyses and kinetics measurements in Sieverts-type apparatus. It was found that both 10 and 24 h milled nanocomposites presents extremely fast hydrogen absorption/desorption kinetics in relatively mild conditions, i.e., 300–350 °C under 10 bar H2 for absorption and 0.13 bar H2 for desorption. Nanocomposites with MgH2, low Fe fraction and no Mg2FeH6 are suggested to be the most appropriate solution for hydrogen storage under the mild conditions studied.  相似文献   

7.
Reactive ball milling (RBM) technique was employed to synthesize ultrafine powders of MgH2, using high energy ball mill operated at room temperature under 50 bar of a hydrogen gas atmosphere. The MgH2 powders obtained after 200 h of continuous RBM time composed of β and γ phases. The powders possessed nanocrystalline characteristics with an average grain of about 10 nm in diameter. The time required for complete hydrogen absorption and desorption measured at 250 °C was 500 s and 2500 s, respectively. In order to improve the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics of as synthesized MgH2 powders, three different types of nanocatalysts (metallic Ni, Nb2O5 and (Ni)x/(Nb2O5)y) were utilized with different weight percentages and independently ball milled with the MgH2 powders for 50 h under 50 bar of a hydrogen gas atmosphere. The results showed that the prepared nanocomposite MgH2/5Ni/5Nb2O5 powders possessed superior hydrogenation/dehydrogenation characteristics, indexed by low values of activation energy for β-phase (68 kJ/mol) and γ-phase (74 kJ/mol). This nanocomposite system showed excellent hydrogenation/dehydrogenization behavior, indexed by the short time required to uptake (41 s) and release (121 s) of 5 wt% H2 at 250 °C. At this temperature the synthesized nanocomposite powders possessed excellent absorption/desorption cyclability of 180 complete cycles. No serious degradation on the hydrogen storage capacity could be detected and the system exhibited nearly constant absorption and desorption values of +5.46 and −5.46 wt% H2, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Magnesium hydride (MgH2) is a promising candidate as a hydrogen storage material. However, its hydrogenation kinetics and thermodynamic stability still have room for improvement. Alloying Mg with Al has been shown to reduce the heat of hydrogenation and improve air resistance, whereas graphite helps accelerating hydrogenation kinetics in pure Mg. In this study, the effects of simultaneous Al alloying and graphite addition on the kinetics and air-exposure resistance were investigated on the Mg60Al40 system. The alloys were pulverized through high-energy ball milling (hereinafter HEBM). We tested different conditions of milling energy, added graphite contents, and air exposure times. Structural characterization was conducted via X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). H2 absorption and desorption properties were obtained through volumetry in a Sieverts-type apparatus and Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC). The desorption activation energies were calculated using DSC curves through Kissinger analysis. Mg60Al40 with 10 wt% graphite addition showed fast activation kinetics, even after 2 years of air exposure. Graphite addition provided a catalytic effect on ball-milled Mg–Al alloys by improving both absorption and desorption kinetics and lowering the activation energy for desorption from 189 kJ/mol to 134 kJ/mol. The fast kinetics, reduced heat of reaction, and improved air resistance of these materials make them interesting candidates for potential application in hydride-based hydrogen storage tanks.  相似文献   

10.
This paper presents improving the hydrogen absorption and desorption of Mg(In) solid solution alloy through doped with CeF3. A nanocomposite of Mg0.95In0.05-5 wt% CeF3 was prepared by mechanical ball milling. The microstructures were systematically investigated by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, scanning transmission electron microscopy. And the hydrogen storage properties were evaluated by isothermal hydrogen absorption and desorption, and pressure-composition-isothermal measurements in a temperature range of 230 °C–320 °C. The mechanism of hydrogen absorption and desorption of Mg0.95In0.05 solid solution is changed by the addition of CeF3. Mg0.95In0.05-5 wt% CeF3 nanocomposite transforms to MgH2, MgF2 and intermetallic compounds of MgIn and CeIn3 by hydrogenation. Upon dehydrogenation, MgH2 reacts with the intermetallic compounds of MgIn and CeIn3 forming a pseudo-ternary Mg(In, Ce) solid solution, which is a fully reversible reaction with a reversible hydrogen capacity~4.0 wt%. The symbiotic nanostructured CeIn3 impedes the agglomeration of MgIn compound, thus improving the dispersibility of element In, and finally improving the reversibility of hydrogen absorption and desorption of Mg(In) solution alloy. For Mg0.95In0.05-5 wt% CeF3 nanocomposite, the dehydriding enthalpy is reduced to about 66.1 ± 3.2 kJ⋅mol−1⋅H2, and the apparent activation energy of dehydrogenation is significantly lowered to 71.9 ± 10.0 kJ⋅mol−1⋅H2, a reduction of ~73 kJ⋅mol−1⋅H2 relative to that for Mg0.95In0.05 solid solution. As a result, Mg0.95In0.05-5 wt% CeF3 nanocomposite can release ~57% H2 in 10 min at 260 °C. The improvements of hydrogen absorption and desorption properties are mainly attributed to the reversible phase transition of Mg(In, Ce) solid solution combing with the multiphase nanostructure.  相似文献   

11.
In this work, a novel Mg-containing high entropy alloy (HEA), namely Mg35Al15Ti25V10Zn15, was synthesized, characterized, and the phases formed after synthesis and after first hydrogen absorption/desorption were analyzed. The alloy composition was conceptualized aiming at increasing the atomic fraction of lightweight elements (35 at.% Mg and 15 at.% Al) to increase its gravimetric hydrogen storage capacity. Ti and V were selected to increase the hydrogen affinity of the alloy. Finally, Zn was selected as an alloying element because of its negative enthalpy of mixing with Mg, which could favor the formation of solid solution and avoid Mg segregation. The Mg35Al15Ti25V10Zn15 HEA was synthesized by high-energy ball milling (HEBM) in two different routes: under argon atmosphere (mechanical alloying – MA) and under hydrogen pressure (reactive milling – RM). The sample produced by MA was composed of a body-centered cubic (BCC) phase with an amount of unmixed Mg. When hydrogenated at 375 °C and under 4.0 MPa of H2, the MA sample absorbed about 2.5 wt% of H2 by forming a mixture of MgH2, a face-centered cubic (FCC) hydride, a body-centered tetragonal (BCT) phase and MgZn2. The desorption sequence upon heating was investigated and it was shown that the MgH2 is the first to desorb. The sequence of desorption is completed by the decomposition of the FCC hydride and BCT phase leading to the formation of the BCC phase. On the other hand, the alloy produced by RM was composed of a mixture of an FCC hydride and MgH2. During desorption upon heating, the MgH2 is also the first to desorb. At lower temperatures (below 350 °C), the FCC hydride decomposes partially forming the BCT phase. At higher temperatures, both FCC hydride and BCT phase decomposes forming the BCC phase. The desorption capacity of the RM sample was 2.75 wt% H2.  相似文献   

12.
Reversible hydrogen storage in MgH2 under mild conditions is a promising way for the realization of “Hydrogen Economy”, in which the development of cheap and highly efficient catalysts is the major challenge. Herein, A two-dimensional layered Fe is prepared via a facile wet-chemical ball milling method and has been confirmed to greatly enhance the hydrogen storage performance of MgH2. Minor addition of 5 wt% Fe nanosheets to MgH2 decreases the onset desorption temperature to 182.1 °C and enables a quick release of 5.44 wt% H2 within 10 min at 300 °C. Besides, the dehydrogenated sample takes up 6 wt% H2 in 10 min under a hydrogen pressure of 3.2 MPa at 200 °C. With the doping of Fe nanosheets, the apparent activation energy of the dehydrogenation reaction for MgH2 is reduced to 40.7 ± 1.0 kJ mol−1. Further ab initio calculations reveal that the presence of Fe extends the Mg–H bond length and reduces its bond strength. We believe that this work would shed light on designing plain metal for catalysis in the area of hydrogen storage and other energy-related issues.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
TiFe alloy can store hydrogen at room temperature and low hydrogen pressure, and its theoretical hydrogen storage capacity is up to 1.8 wt%. However, TiFe alloy needs to be activated at high pressure (5 MPa hydrogen) and high temperature (673–723 K), which limits the practical application of TiFe alloy. The as-cast Ti21.7Y0.3Fe16Mn3Cr alloy was milled for 0, 0.5, 0.75, 1, and 3 h to study the effects of ball milling on phase structures and hydrogen storage performances. Emphasis was focused on the activation process of as-milled alloys at different temperatures, including the activation process at 483, 443, and 403 K. The results show that the alloys were consisted of TiFe phase, and [Fe, Cr] solid solution. The nanocrystalline boundary produced by milling and the phase boundary provided by the second phase provide a large number of channels for hydrogen diffusion and promote the improvement of hydrogen storage performances. The time required for activation process of as-milled alloys was significantly reduced, and the activation time of as-milled (0.75 h) was only 4 min, and its enthalpy variation for hydrogen absorption and desorption was 22.943 and 26.215 kJ mol−1 H2, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Magnesium is considered as a promising candidate for hydrogen storage due to its high storage capacity (theoretical value ~ 7.6 wt%). Nanocomposites of Magnesium hydride and activated charcoal (AC) were prepared using ball milling method. These nanocomposites were characterized by XRD, TGA, DSC and SEM techniques. The TGA analysis show that the MgH2-5 wt% AC nanocomposite exhibits dehydrogenation capacity of 7.45 wt% (which is very close to the storage capacity of MgH2) and starts release of hydrogen at 140 °C temperature. The results from the Kissinger plot from DSC result showed that the activation energy for hydrogen desorption of MgH2 with 5 wt% AC was reduced compared to those of as-received.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
MgH2-based hydrogen storage materials are promising candidates for solid-state hydrogen storage allowing efficient thermal management in energy systems integrating metal hydride hydrogen store with a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) providing dissipated heat at temperatures between 400 and 600 °C. Recently, we have shown that graphite-modified composite of TiH2 and MgH2 prepared by high-energy reactive ball milling in hydrogen (HRBM), demonstrates a high reversible gravimetric H storage capacity exceeding 5 wt % H, fast hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics and excellent cycle stability. In present study, 0.9 MgH2 + 0.1 TiH2 +5 wt %C nanocomposite with a maximum hydrogen storage capacity of 6.3 wt% H was prepared by HRBM preceded by a short homogenizing pre-milling in inert gas. 300 g of the composite was loaded into a storage tank accommodating an air-heated stainless steel metal hydride (MH) container equipped with transversal internal (copper) and external (aluminium) fins. Tests of the tank were carried out in a temperature range from 150 °C (H2 absorption) to 370 °C (H2 desorption) and showed its ability to deliver up to 185 NL H2 corresponding to a reversible H storage capacity of the MH material of appr. 5 wt% H. No significant deterioration of the reversible H storage capacity was observed during 20 heating/cooling H2 discharge/charge cycles. It was found that H2 desorption performance can be tailored by selecting appropriate thermal management conditions and an optimal operational regime has been proposed.  相似文献   

20.
Herein, a new type of trimesic acid-Ni based metal organic framework (TMA-Ni MOF) was synthesized and then, its derivative Ni@C was introduced into MgH2 as destabilizer through high energy ball milling to prepare a Mg–Ni@C–H composite. X-ray diffraction analyses indicate the formation of Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4 as major phases after dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation of the composite, respectively. Two hydrogen absorption plateaus are observed in the Mg–Ni@C–H composite, corresponding to the hydrogenation of Mg and Mg2Ni, with the enthalpy change values of −75.8 and −52.3 kJ mol−1 H2 respectively. Thus, it can be concluded that a destabilization effect is brought by Ni@C on thermodynamic properties of MgH2. In addition, the hydriding/dehydriding kinetics of MgH2 is notably accelerated with the addition of Ni-based MOF derivative. The activation energy values of both hydrogen absorption and desorption are significantly lowered down with the assistance of Ni@C. Moreover, stable hydrogen de/absorption capacity and kinetics are remained during 25 cycles of high-rate re/dehydrogenation, which can be ascribed to the carbon-wrapped structure of the composite, with which the aggregation of the nanosized particles can be evidently avioded.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号