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1.
The hydrogen storage properties of 5LiBH4 + Mg2FeH6 reactive hydride composites for reversible hydrogen storage were investigated by comparing with the 2LiBH4 + MgH2 composite in the present work. The dehydrogenation pathway and reaction mechanism of 5LiBH4 + Mg2FeH6 composite were also investigated and elucidated. The self-decomposition of Mg2FeH6 leads to the in situ formation of Mg and Fe particles on the surface of LiBH4, resulting in a well dispersion between different reacting phases. The formation of FeB is observed during the dehydrogenation of 5LiBH4 + Mg2FeH6 composite, which might supplies nucleation sites of MgB2 during the dehydrogenation process, but is not an ascendant catalyst for the self-decomposition of LiBH4. And FeB can also transform to the LiBH4 and Fe by reacting with LiH and H2 during the rehydrogenation process. The dehydrogenation capacity for 5LiBH4 + Mg2FeH6 composite still gets to 6.5 wt% even after four cycles. The X-ray diffraction analyses reveal the phase transitions during the hydriding and dehydriding cycle. The formed FeB in the composite maintains a nanostructure after four hydriding-dehydriding cycles. The loss of hydrogen storage capacity and de-/rehydrogenation kinetics can be attributed to the incomplete generation of Mg2FeH6 during the rehydrogenation process.  相似文献   

2.
The investigation of thermally induced dehydrogenation of LiBH4 reveals that LiBH4 doped with the graphene catalysts shows superior dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation performance to that of Vulcan XC-72, carbon nanotube and BP2000 doped LiBH4. For doping with 20 wt.% graphene, thermal dehydrogenation of LiBH4 is found to start at ca. 230 °C and a total weight loss of 11.4 wt.% can be obtained below 700 °C. With increased loading of graphene within a LiBH4 sample, the onset dehydrogenation temperature and the two main desorption peaks from LiBH4 are found to decrease while the hydrogen release amount is found to increase. Moreover, variation of the equilibrium pressure obtained from isotherms measured at 350–450 °C indicate the dehydrogenation enthalpy is reduced from 74 kJ mol−1 H2 for pure LiBH4 to ca. 40 kJ mol−1 H2 for 20 wt.% graphene doped LiBH4. Importantly, the reversible dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation process was achieved under 3 MPa H2 at 400 °C for 10 h, with a capacity of ca. 4.0 wt.% in the tenth cycle. Especially, LiBH4 is reformed and new species, Li2B10H10, is detected after the rehydrogenation process.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of nanoscale h-BN addition by milling on the de-/re-hydrogenation of LiBH4 was investigated. With the increasing h-BN ratio, the milled LiBH4/h-BN composites showed lower dehydrogenation temperature. For the LiBH4-3BN composite (mole ratio 1:3), the on-set dehydrogenation temperature was reduced from 290 °C for the milled pure LiBH4 down to 175 °C, and the initial dehydrogenation capacity could reach 3.1 wt.% (equivalent to 13.7 wt.% of the component LiBH4) within ~2 h at 400 °C. Under moderate rehydrogenation conditions of 400 °C and 10 MPa H2 pressure, the 2nd and 3th cyclic dehydrogenation capacity of LiBH4-3BN composite almost remained unchanged, indicating remarkably improved rehydrogenation reversibility in comparison to milled pure LiBH4. FTIR analysis reveals specific interaction between h-BN and LiBH4 probably originating from the polar mechanism between polarizable B–H bond and B–N bond, which should be responsible for the enhanced dehydrogenation kinetics and reversibility. This work demonstrates the specific catalytic role of nanoscale h-BN and its potential for reversible hydrogen storage by compositing with high-capacity borohydrides.  相似文献   

4.
Rehydrogenation behavior of 6LiBH4 + CaH2 composite with NbF5 has been studied between 350 and 500 °C after dehydrogenation at 450 °C. The composite exhibits the best rehydrogenation feature at 450 °C in terms of the overall rehydrogenation rate and the amount of absorbed hydrogen. It is found that about 9 wt% hydrogen is absorbed at 450 °C for 12 h. Up to 10 dehydrogenation–hydrogenation cycles have been carried out for the composite. It is demonstrated that 6LiBH4 + CaH2 with 15 wt% NbF5 maintains a reversible hydrogen storage capacity of about 6 wt% at 450 °C after a slight degradation between the 1st and 5th cycles. The addition of NbF5 seems to improve the cycle properties by retarding microstructural coarsening during cycles.  相似文献   

5.
It is well known that the dehydrogenation pathway of the LiBH4–MgH2 composite system is highly reliant on whether decomposition is performed under vacuum or a hydrogen back-pressure. In this work, the effects of hydrogen back-pressure and NbF5 addition on the dehydrogenation kinetics of the LiBH4–MgH2 system are studied under either vacuum or hydrogen back-pressure, as well as the subsequent rehydrogenation and cycling. For the pristine sample, faster desorption kinetics was obtained under vacuum, but the performance is compromised by slow absorption kinetics. In contrast, hydrogen back-pressure remarkably promotes the absorption kinetics and increases the reversible hydrogen storage capacity, but with the penalty of much slower desorption kinetics. These drawbacks were overcome after doping with NbF5, with which the dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation kinetics was significantly improved. In particular, the enhanced kinetics was observed to persist well, even after 9 cycles, in the case of the NbF5 doped sample under hydrogen back-pressure, as well as the suppression of forming Li2B12H12. Furthermore, the mechanism that is behind these effects of NbF5 additive on the reversible dehydrogenation reaction of the LiBH4–MgH2 system is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The dehydrogenation reaction pathway of a 0.91 (0.62LiBH4-0.38NaBH4)-0.09Ni mixture in the temperature range of 25–650 °C in flowing Ar and the cycling stability in H2 are presented. No H2 is released immediately after melting at 225 °C. The major dehydrogenation occurs above 350 °C. Adding nano-sized Ni reduces the dehydrogenation peak temperatures by 20–25 °C, leading to three decomposition steps where Ni4B3 and Li1.2Ni2.5B2 are found in the major dehydrogenation products for the 1st and the 3rd step; whilst the Ni-free mixture decomposes through a two-step decomposition pathway. A total of 8.1 wt% of hydrogen release from the 0.91 (0.62LiBH4-0.38NaBH4)-0.09Ni mixture is achieved at 650 °C in Ar. This mixture has a poor hydrogen cycling stability as its reversible hydrogen content decreases from 5.1 wt% to 1.1 wt% and 0.6 wt% during three complete desorption-absorption-cycles. However, the addition of nano-sized Ni facilitates the reformation of LiBH4.  相似文献   

7.
De/rehydrogenation kinetics and reversibility of MgH2 are improved by doping with activated carbon nanofibers (ACNF) and compositing with LiBH4. Via doping with 5 wt % ACNF, hydrogen absorption of Mg to MgH2 (T = 320 °C and p(H2) = 50 bar) increases from 0.3 to 4.5 wt % H2. Significant reduction of onset dehydrogenation temperature of MgH2 to 340 °C (ΔT = 70 °C as compared with pristine MgH2) together with 6.8–8.2 wt % H2 can be obtained by compositing Mg-5 wt. % ACNF with LiBH4 (LiBH4:Mg mole ratios of 0.5:1, 1:1, and 2:1). During dehydrogenation of Mg-rich composites (0.5:1 and 1:1 mol ratios), the formation of MgB2 and Mg0.816Li0.184 implying the reaction between LiBH4 and MgH2 favors kinetic properties and reversibility, while the composite with 2:1 mol ratio shows individual dehydrogenation of LiBH4 and MgH2. For up-scaling to hydrogen storage tank (~120 times greater sample weight than laboratory scale) of the most suitable composite (1:1 mol ratio), de/rehydrogenation kinetics and hydrogen content released at all positions of the tank are comparable and approach to those from laboratory scale. Due to high purity (100%) and temperature of hydrogen gas from hydride tank, the performance of single proton exchange membrane fuel cell enhances up to 30% with respect to the results from compressed gas tank.  相似文献   

8.
Nanosized cobalt sulfide and cobalt boride were synthesized and doped into LiBH4 to improve the dehydrogenation properties of this important candidate for hydrogen storage. With respect to CoSx doping, the dehydrogenation temperature (peak temperature observed by mass spectrometry) of pristine LiBH4 can be reduced from 440 °C to 175 °C with a maximum capacity of 6.7 wt% at 50% doping. Unfortunately, B2H6 is liberated and the process is not reversible because the CoSx dopant reacts with LiBH4 to form more stable compounds. By changing CoSx to CoBx, a reversible dehydrogenation was realized with greatly improved reversibility. The dehydrogenation temperature was reduced to 350 °C with a maximum capacity of 8.4 wt% at 50% doping amount. It is very significant that CoBx is stable and the release of B2H6 is eliminated. A reversible hydrogen desorption of about 5.3 wt% can be achieved with a LiBH4 + 50% CoBx mixture under a mild rehydrogenation condition of 400 °C at 10 MPa H2. It is obvious that CoSx acts as a reactant even though the dehydrogenation is greatly enhanced, while CoBx behaves as a catalyst significantly promoting the dehydrogenation and reversibility of LiBH4.  相似文献   

9.
By doping with 5 wt % TiF4 and activated carbon (AC), onset and main dehydrogenation temperatures of MgH2 significantly reduce (ΔT = 138 and 109 °C, respectively) with hydrogen capacity of 4.4 wt % H2. Up-scaling to storage tank begins with packing volume and sample weight of 28.8 mL and ~14.5 g, respectively, and continues to 92.6 mL and ~60.5–67 g, respectively. Detailed hydrogen sorption mechanisms and kinetics of the tank tightly packed with four beds of MgH2TiF4-AC (~60.5 g) are investigated. De/rehydrogenation mechanisms are detected by three temperature sensors located at different positions along the tank radius, while hydrogen permeability is benefited by stainless steel mesh sheets and tube inserted in the hydride beds. Fast desorption kinetics of MgH2TiF4-AC tank at ~275–283 °C, approaching to onset dehydrogenation temperature of the powder sample (272 °C) suggests comparable performances of laboratory and tank scales. Hydrogen desorption (T = 300 °C and P(H2) = 1 bar) and absorption (T = 250 °C and P(H2) = 10–15 bar) of MgH2TiF4-AC tank provide gravimetric and volumetric capacities during the 1st-2nd cycles of 4.46 wt % H2 and 28 gH2/L, respectively, while those during the 3rd-15th cycles are up to 3.62 wt % H2 and 23 gH2/L, respectively. Due to homogeneous heat transfer along the tank radius, de/rehydrogenation kinetics superior at the tank center and degrading forward the tank wall can be due to poor hydrogen permeability. Particle sintering and/or agglomeration upon cycling yield deficient hydrogen content reproduced.  相似文献   

10.
To improve the hydrogen storage property of LiBH4, the LiBH4/Ca(AlH4)2 reactive systems with various ratios were constructed, and their de-/hydrogenation properties as well as the reaction mechanisms were investigated experimentally. It was found that the sample with the LiBH4 to Ca(AlH4)2 molar ratio of 6:1 exhibits the best comprehensive hydrogen storage properties, desorbing hydrogen completely (8.2 wt.%) within 35 min at 450 °C and reversibly absorbing 4.5 wt.% of hydrogen at 450 °C under a hydrogen pressure as low as 4.0 MPa. During the first dehydrogenation process of the LiBH4/Ca(AlH4)2 systems, the CaH2 and Al particles were in situ precipitated via the self-decomposition of Ca(AlH4)2, and then reacted with LiBH4 to form CaB6, AlB2 and LiH. Whereafter, the sample can cycle between LiBH4 + Ca(BH4)2 + Al in the hydrogenated state and CaB6 + AlB2 + LiH in the dehydrogenated state.  相似文献   

11.
In this work, the hydriding–dehydriding properties of the LiBH4–NbF5 mixtures were investigated. It was found that the dehydrogenation and reversibility properties of LiBH4 were significantly improved by NbF5. Temperature-programed dehydrogenation (TPD) showed that 5LiBH4–NbF5 sample started releasing hydrogen from as low as 60 °C, and 4 wt.% hydrogen could be obtained below 255 °C. Meanwhile, ∼7 wt.% H2 could be reached at 400 °C in 20LiBH4–NbF5 sample, whereas pristine LiBH4 only released ∼0.7 wt.% H2. In addition, reversibility measurement demonstrated that over 4.4 wt.% H2 could still be released even during the fifth dehydrogenation in 20LiBH4–NbF5 sample. The experimental results suggested that a new borohydride possibly formed during ball milling the LiBH4–NbF5 mixtures might be the source of the active effect of NbF5 on LiBH4.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Though LiBH4-MgH2 system exhibits an excellent hydrogen storage property, it still presents high decomposition temperature over 350 °C and sluggish hydrogen absorption/desorption kinetics. In order to improve the hydrogen storage properties, the influence of MoCl3 as an additive on the hydrogenation and dehydrogenation properties of LiBH4-MgH2 system is investigated. The reversible hydrogen storage performance is significantly improved, which leads to a capacity of about 7 wt.% hydrogen at 300 °C. XRD analysis reveals that the metallic Mo is formed by the reaction between LiBH4 and MoCl3, which is highly dispersed in the sample and results in improved dehydrogenation and hydrogenation performance of LiBH4-MgH2 system. From Kissinger plot, the activation energy for hydrogen desorption of LiBH4-MgH2 system with additive MoCl3 is estimated to be ∼43 kJ mol−1 H2, 10 kJ mol−1 lower than that for the pure LiBH4-MgH2 system indicating that the kinetics of LiBH4-MgH2 composite is significantly improved by the introduction of Mo.  相似文献   

14.
Co-based catalyst can significantly improve the dehydrogenation kinetics of the eutectic composite of LiBH4–Mg(BH4)2 (1/1 M ratio). The onset hydrogen desorption temperature of the composite is at about 155 °C, which is ca. 245, 110 or 27 °C lower than that of LiBH4, Mg(BH4)2 or pristine LiBH4–Mg(BH4)2, respectively. Upon holding the samples at 270 °C, the Co catalyzed composite can release hydrogen at a rate 1.6 times faster than that of the pristine one. Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) characterization evidenced that Co was in a reduced state of Co+ which may serve as the functional species in catalyzing the dehydrogenation of the composite.  相似文献   

15.
LiBH4 is regarded as a promising hydrogen storage material due to its high hydrogen density. In this study, the dehydrogenation properties of LiBH4 were remarkably enhanced by doping hydrogenated Mg3RE compounds (RE denotes La, Ce, Nd rare earth metals), which are composed of nanostructured MgH2 and REH2+x (denoted as H − Mg3RE). For the LiBH4 + H − Mg3La mixture, the component LiBH4 desorbed 6 wt.% hydrogen even at a relatively low temperature of 340 °C, far lower than the desorption temperature of pure LiBH4 or the 2LiBH4 + MgH2 system. This kinetic improvement is attributed to the hydrogen exchange mechanism between the H − Mg3La and LiBH4, in the sense that the decomposition of MgH2 and LaH2+x catalyzed the dehydrogenation of LiBH4 through hydrogen exchange effect rather than mutual chemical reaction requiring higher temperature and hydrogen pressure. However, prior to fast hydrogen release, the hydrogen exchange effect suppressed the dehydriding of MgH2 and elevated its desorption temperature. It is expected to strengthen the hydrogen exchange effect by compositing the LiBH4 with other nanosized metal hydrides and to obtain better dehydrogenation properties.  相似文献   

16.
The composites of (NaBH4+2Mg(OH)2) and (LiBH4+2Mg(OH)2) without and with nanometric Ni (n-Ni) added as a potential catalyst were synthesized by high energy ball milling. The ball milled NaBH4-based composite desorbs hydrogen in one exothermic reaction in contrast to its LiBH4-based counterpart which dehydrogenates in two reactions: an exothermic and endothermic. The NaBH4-based composite starts desorbing hydrogen at 240 °C. Its ball milled LiBH4-based counterpart starts desorbing at 200 °C. The latter initially desorbs hydrogen rapidly but then the rate of desorption suddenly decelerates. The estimated apparent activation energy for the NaBH4-based composite without and with n-Ni is equal to 152 ± 2.2 and 157 ± 0.9 kJ/mol, respectively. In contrast, the apparent activation energy for the initial rapid dehydrogenation for the LiBH4-based composite is very low being equal to 47 ± 2 and 38 ± 9 kJ/mol for the composite without and with the n-Ni additive, respectively. XRD phase studies after volumetric isothermal dehydrogenation tests show the presence of NaBO2 and MgO for the NaBH4-based composite. For the LiBH4-based composite phases such as MgO, Li3BO3, MgB2, MgB6 are the products of the first exothermic reaction which has a theoretical H2 capacity of 8.1 wt.%. However, for reasons which are not quite clear, the first reaction never goes to full completion even at 300 °C desorbing ∼4.5 wt.% H2 at this temperature. The products of the second endothermic reaction for the LiBH4-based composite are MgO, MgB6, B and LiMgBO3 and the reaction has a theoretical H2 capacity of 2.26 wt.%. The effect of the addition of 5 wt.% nanometric Ni on the dehydrogenation behavior of both the NaBH4-and LiBH4-based composites is rather negligible. The n-Ni additive may not be the optimal catalyst for these hydride composite systems although more tests are required since only one n-Ni content was examined.  相似文献   

17.
De/rehydrogenation performances and reaction pathways of nanoconfined 2LiBH4MgH2 into activated carbon (AC) packed in small hydrogen storage tank are proposed for the first time. Total and material storage capacities upon five hydrogen release and uptake cycles are 3.56–4.55 and 2.03–3.28 wt % H2, respectively. Inferior hydrogen content to theoretical capacity (material capacity of 5.7 wt % H2) is due to partial dehydrogenation during sample preparation and incomplete decomposition of LiBH4 as well as the formation of thermally stable Li2B12H12 upon cycling. Two-step dehydrogenation of MgH2 and LiBH4 to produce Mg and MgB2+LiH, respectively is found at all positions in the tank. For rehydrogenation, reversibility of MgH2 and LiBH4 proceeds via different reaction mechanisms. Although isothermal condition (Tset = 350 °C) and controlled pressure range (e.g., 30–40 bar H2 for hydrogenation) are applied, temperature gradient inside the tank and poor hydrogen diffusion through hydride bed, especially in the sample bulk are detected. This results in alteration of de/rehydrogenation pathways of hydrides at different positions in the tank. Thus, further development of hydrogen storage tank based 2LiBH4MgH2 nanoconfined in AC includes the improvement of thermal conductivity of materials and temperature control system as well as hydrogen permeability.  相似文献   

18.
The various Mg–B–Al–H systems composed of Mg(BH4)2 and different Al-sources (metallic Al, LiAlH4 and its decomposition products) have been investigated as potential hydrogen storage materials. The role of Al was studied on the dehydrogenation and the rehydrogenation of the systems. The results indicate that the different Al-sources exhibit a similar improving effect on the dehydrogenation properties of Mg(BH4)2. Taking the Mg(BH4)2 + LiAlH4 system as an example, at first LiAlH4 rapidly decomposes into LiH and Al, then Mg(BH4)2 decomposes into MgH2 and B, finally the MgH2 reacts with Al, LiH and B, which forms Mg3Al2 and MgAlB4. The system starts to desorb H2 at 140 °C and desorbs 3.6 wt.% H2 below 300 °C, while individual Mg(BH4)2 starts to desorb H2 at 250 °C and desorbs only 1.3 wt.% H2 below 300 °C. The isothermal desorption kinetics of the Mg–B–Al–H systems is about 40% faster than that of Mg(BH4)2 at the hydrogen desorption ratio of 90%. In addition, the Mg–B–Al–H systems show partial reversibility at moderate temperature and pressure. For Al-added system, the product of rehydrogenation is MgH2, while for LiAlH4-added system the product is composed of LiBH4 and MgH2.  相似文献   

19.
2LiBH4/MgH2 system is a representative and promising reactive hydride composite for hydrogen storage. However, the high desorption temperature and sluggish desorption kinetics hamper its practical application. In our present report, we successfully introduce CoNiB nanoparticles as catalysts to improve the dehydrogenation performances of the 2LiBH4/MgH2 composite. The sample with CoNiB additives shows a significant desorption property. Temperature programmed desorption (TPD) measurement demonstrates that the peak decomposition temperatures of MgH2 and LiBH4 are lowered to be 315 °C and 417 °C for the CoNiB-doped 2LiBH4/MgH2. Isothermal dehydrogenation analysis demonstrates that approximately 10.2 wt% hydrogen can be released within 360 min at 400 °C. In addition, this study gives a preliminary evidence for understanding the CoNiB catalytic mechanism of 2LiBH4/MgH2  相似文献   

20.
LiBH4+1/2MgH2 is a promising reactive hydride composite for hydrogen storage. In the present study, three Ce-based additives were used as catalysts to enhance the hydrogen storage performance of LiBH4+1/2MgH2 composites. The composites with Ce additives demonstrated significantly improved dehydrogenation kinetics and cyclic stability compared with the pure composite. X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy analyses clearly revealed the phase transitions and morphological evolution during the hydriding-dehydriding cycling. The composites with Ce-based additives displayed stable nanostructures, in contrast to the rapid microstructural deterioration in the uncatalyzed composite. The CeB6 formed in the composites had a particle size of 10 nm after five cycles. It may act as the nucleus for MgB2 formation during dehydrogenation and thus account for the structural and performance stability of the composites upon cycling.  相似文献   

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