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1.
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) were mechanically milled with LiBH4/MgH2 mixture, and examined with respect to its effect on the reversible dehydrogenation properties of the Li–Mg–B–H system. Experimental results show that the addition of SWNTs results in an enhanced dehydriding rate and improved cyclic stability of the LiBH4/MgH2 composite. For example, the LiBH4/MgH2 composite with 10 wt% purified SWNTs additive can release nearly 10 wt% hydrogen within 20 min at 450 °C, with an average dehydriding rate over 2 times faster than that of the neat LiBH4/MgH2 sample. Based on the results of phase analysis and a series of designed experiments, the mechanism underlying the observed property improvement was discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In this paper, we report the hydrogen storage properties and reaction mechanism of NaAlH4–MgH2–LiBH4 (1:1:1) ternary-hydride system prepared by ball milling. It was found that during ball milling, the NaAlH4/MgH2/LiBH4 combination converted readily to the mixture of LiAlH4/MgH2/NaBH4 and there is a mutual destabilization among the hydrides. Three major dehydrogenation steps were observed in the system, which corresponds to the decomposition of LiAlH4, MgH2, and NaBH4, respectively. The onset dehydrogenation temperature of MgH2 in this system is observed at around 275 °C, which is over 55 °C lower from that of as-milled MgH2. Meanwhile, NaBH4-relevant decomposition showed significant improvement, starts to release hydrogen at 370 °C, which is reduced by about 110 °C compared to the as-milled NaBH4. The second and third steps decomposition enthalpy of the system were determined by differential scanning calorimetry measurements and the enthalpies were changed to be 61 and 100 kJ mol−1 H2 respectively, which are smaller than that of MgH2 and NaBH4 alone. From the Kissinger plot, the apparent activation energy, EA, for the decomposition of MgH2 and NaBH4 in the composite was reduced to 96.85 and 111.74 kJ mol−1 respectively. It is believed that the enhancement of the dehydrogenation properties was attributed to the formation of intermediate compounds, including Li–Mg, Mg–Al, and Mg–Al–B alloys, upon dehydrogenation, which change the thermodynamics of the reactions through altering the de/rehydrogenation pathway.  相似文献   

3.
Significant improvements in the hydrogen absorption/desorption properties of the 2LiNH2–1.1MgH2–0.1LiBH4 composite have been achieved by adding 3wt% ZrCo hydride. The composite can absorb 5.3wt% hydrogen under 7.0 MPa hydrogen pressure in 10 min and desorb 3.75wt% hydrogen under 0.1 MPa H2 pressure in 60 min at 150 °C, compared with 2.75wt% and 1.67wt% hydrogen under the same hydrogenation/dehydrogenation conditions without the ZrCo hydride addition, respectively. TPD measurements showed that the dehydrogenation temperature of the ZrCo hydride-doped sample was decreased about 10 °C compared to that of the pristine sample. It is concluded that both the homogeneous distribution of ZrCo particles in the matrix observed by SEM and EDS and the destabilized N–H bonds detected by IR spectrum are the main reasons for the improvement of H-cycling kinetics of the 2LiNH2–1.1MgH2–0.1LiBH4 system.  相似文献   

4.
In this article, we investigate the ternary LiNH2–MgH2–LiBH4 hydrogen storage system by adopting various processing reaction pathways. The stoichiometric ratio of LiNH2:MgH2:LiBH4 is kept constant with a 2:1:1 molar ratio. All samples are prepared using solid-state mechano-chemical synthesis with a constant rotational speed, but with varying milling duration. Furthermore, the order of addition of parent compounds as well as the crystallite size of MgH2 are varied before milling. All samples are intimate mixtures of Li–B–N–H quaternary hydride phase with MgH2, as evidenced by XRD and FTIR measurements. It is found that the samples with MgH2 crystallite sizes of approximately 10 nm exhibit lower initial hydrogen release at a temperature of 150 °C. Furthermore, it is observed that the crystallite size of Li–B–N–H has a significant effect on the amount of hydrogen release with an optimum size of 28 nm. The as-synthesized hydrides exhibit two main hydrogen release temperatures, one around 160 °C and the other around 300 °C. The main hydrogen release temperature is reduced from 310 °C to 270 °C, while hydrogen is first reversibly released at temperatures as low as 150 °C with a total hydrogen capacity of ∼6 wt.%. Detailed thermal, capacity, structural and microstructural properties are discussed and correlated with the activation energies of these materials.  相似文献   

5.
The present investigation describes the hydrogen storage properties of 2:1 molar ratio of MgH2–NaAlH4 composite. De/rehydrogenation study reveals that MgH2–NaAlH4 composite offers beneficial hydrogen storage characteristics as compared to pristine NaAlH4 and MgH2. To investigate the effect of carbon nanostructures (CNS) on the de/rehydrogenation behavior of MgH2–NaAlH4 composite, we have employed 2 wt.% CNS namely, single wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) and graphene nano sheets (GNS). It is found that the hydrogen storage behavior of composite gets improved by the addition of 2 wt.% CNS. In particular, catalytic effect of GNS + SWCNT improves the hydrogen storage behavior and cyclability of the composite. De/rehydrogenation experiments performed up to six cycles show loss of 1.50 wt.% and 0.84 wt.% hydrogen capacity in MgH2–NaAlH4 catalyzed with 2 wt.% SWCNT and 2 wt.% GNS respectively. On the other hand, the loss of hydrogen capacity after six rehydrogenation cycles in GNS + SWCNT (1.5 + 0.5) wt.% catalyzed MgH2–NaAlH4 is diminished to 0.45 wt.%.  相似文献   

6.
In the present work, the role of NbF5 addition amount in affecting the comprehensive hydrogen storage properties (dehydrogenation, rehydrogenation, cycling performance, hydrogen capacity) of 2LiBH4–MgH2 system as well as the catalytic mechanism of NbF5 have been systematically studied. It is found that increasing the addition amount of NbF5 to the 2LiBH4–MgH2 system not only results in dehydrogenation temperature reduction and hydriding–dehydriding kinetics enhancement but also leads to the de/rehydrogenation capacity loss. Compared with other samples, 2LiBH4–MgH2 doping with NbF5 in weight ratios of 40:4 exhibits superior comprehensive hydrogen storage properties, which can stably release ∼8.31 wt.% hydrogen within 2.5 h under 4 bar H2 and absorb ∼8.79 wt.% hydrogen within 10 min under 65 bar H2 at 400 °C even up to 20 cycling. As far as we know, this is the first time that excellent reversibility as high as 20 cycles without obvious degradation tendency in both of hydrogen capacity and reaction rate has been achieved in the 2LiBH4–MgH2 system. The further experimental study reveals that the highly catalytic effects of NbF5 on the 2LiBH4–MgH2 system are derived from the reaction between NbF5 and LiBH4, which provides a fundamental insight into the catalytic mechanism of NbF5.  相似文献   

7.
In a previous paper, it was demonstrated that a MgH2–NaAlH4 composite system had improved dehydrogenation performance compared with as-milled pure NaAlH4 and pure MgH2 alone. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the hydrogen storage properties of the MgH2–NaAlH4 composite in the presence of TiF3. 10 wt.% TiF3 was added to the MgH2–NaAlH4 mixture, and its catalytic effects were investigated. The reaction mechanism and the hydrogen storage properties were studied by X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetric analysis, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), temperature-programmed-desorption and isothermal sorption measurements. The DSC results show that MgH2–NaAlH4 composite milled with 10 wt.% TiF3 had lower dehydrogenation temperatures, by 100, 73, 30, and 25 °C, respectively, for each step in the four-step dehydrogenation process compared to the neat MgH2–NaAlH4 composite. Kinetic desorption results show that the MgH2–NaAlH4–TiF3 composite released about 2.4 wt.% hydrogen within 10 min at 300 °C, while the neat MgH2–NaAlH4 sample only released less than 1.0 wt.% hydrogen under the same conditions. From the Kissinger plot, the apparent activation energy, EA, for the decomposition of MgH2, NaMgH3, and NaH in the MgH2–NaAlH4–TiF3 composite was reduced to 71, 104, and 124 kJ/mol, respectively, compared with 148, 142, and 138 kJ/mol in the neat MgH2–NaAlH4 composite. The high catalytic activity of TiF3 is associated with in situ formation of a microcrystalline intermetallic Ti–Al phase from TiF3 and NaAlH4 during ball milling or the dehydrogenation process. Once formed, the Ti–Al phase acts as a real catalyst in the MgH2–NaAlH4–TiF3 composite system.  相似文献   

8.
Remarkable improvement of hydrogen sorption properties of Li–N–H system has been obtained by doping with a small amount of LiBH4. The starting and ending temperatures of hydrogen desorption shift to lower temperatures and the release of NH3 is obviously restrained by 10 mol% LiBH4 doping. The kinetics of hydrogen desorption and absorption of Li–N–H system became faster by the addition of LiBH4. About 4 wt.% H2 can be released within 30 min and ∼4.8 wt.% H2 can be reabsorbed within 2 min by LiBH4 doped sample at 250 °C, while only 1.44 wt.% H2 is released and 2.1 wt.% is reabsorbed for pure Li–N–H system. The quaternary hydride (LiNH2)x(LiBH4)(1−x) formed by the reaction between LiBH4 and LiNH2 may contribute to the enhancement of the hydrogen sorption performances by yielding a ionic liquid phase and transferring LiNH2 from solid state to molten state with a weakened N–H bond.  相似文献   

9.
To improve nanoconfinement of LiBH4 and MgH2 in carbon aerogel scaffold (CAS), particle size reduction of MgH2 by premilling technique before melt infiltration is proposed. MgH2 is premilled for 5 h prior to milling with LiBH4 and nanoconfinement in CAS to obtained nanoconfined 2LiBH4–premilled MgH2. Significant confinement of both LiBH4 and MgH2 in CAS, confirmed by SEM–EDS–mapping results, is achieved due to MgH2 premilling. Due to effective nanoconfinement, enhancement of CAS:hydride composite weight ratio to 1:1, resulting in increase of hydrogen storage capacity, is possible. Nanoconfined 2LiBH4–premilled MgH2 reveals a single–step dehydrogenation at 345 °C with no B2H6 release, while dehydrogenation of nanoconfined sample without MgH2 premilling performs in multiple steps at elevated temperatures (up to 430 °C) together with considerable amount of B2H6 release. Activation energy (EA) for the main dehydrogenation of nanoconfined 2LiBH4–premilled MgH2 is considerably lower than those of LiBH4 and MgH2 of bulk 2LiBH4–MgH2EA = 31.9 and 55.8 kJ/mol with respect to LiBH4 and MgH2, respectively). Approximately twice faster dehydrogenation rate are accomplished after MgH2 premilling. Three hydrogen release (T = 320 °C, P(H2) = 3–4 bar) and uptake (T = 320–325 °C, P(H2) = 84 bar) cycles of nanoconfined 2LiBH4–premilled MgH2 reveal up to 4.96 wt. % H2 (10 wt. % H2 with respect to hydride composite content), while the 1st desorption of nanoconfined sample without MgH2 premilling gives 4.30 wt. % of combined B2H6 and H2 gases. It should be remarked that not only kinetic improvement and B2H6 suppression are obtained by MgH2 premilling, but also the lowest dehydrogenation temperature (T = 320 °C) among other modified 2LiBH4–MgH2 systems is acquired.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Nanoconfinement of 2LiBH4–MgH2–TiCl3 in resorcinol–formaldehyde carbon aerogel scaffold (RF–CAS) for reversible hydrogen storage applications is proposed. RF–CAS is encapsulated with approximately 1.6 wt. % TiCl3 by solution impregnation technique, and it is further nanoconfined with bulk 2LiBH4–MgH2 via melt infiltration. Faster dehydrogenation kinetics is obtained after TiCl3 impregnation, for example, nanoconfined 2LiBH4–MgH2–TiCl3 requires ∼1 and 4.5 h, respectively, to release 95% of the total hydrogen content during the 1st and 2nd cycles, while nanoconfined 2LiBH4–MgH2 (∼2.5 and 7 h, respectively) and bulk material (∼23 and 22 h, respectively) take considerably longer. Moreover, 95–98.6% of the theoretical H2 storage capacity (3.6–3.75 wt. % H2) is reproduced after four hydrogen release and uptake cycles of the nanoconfined 2LiBH4–MgH2–TiCl3. The reversibility of this hydrogen storage material is confirmed by the formation of LiBH4 and MgH2 after rehydrogenation using FTIR and SR-PXD techniques, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of MgFe2O4 on the hydrogen storage properties of the composite Na3AlH64LiBH4 was studied for the first time, where it was found that MgFe2O4 addition decreased the onset desorption temperature of Na3AlH64LiBH4. Hydrogen (~9.5 wt%) was released in three stages and the dehydrogenation temperatures were reduced to 80 °C, 350 °C, and 430 °C for the first, second, and third stage, respectively. The absorption kinetics of Na3AlH64LiBH4 was also significantly improved due to the catalytic effect of MgFe2O4. Using Kissinger analysis, the apparent activation energies of decomposition of the Li3AlH6 and NaBH4 stages in Na3AlH64LiBH4-10 wt% MgFe2O4 were calculated to be 72 and 141 kJ/mol, respectively. These values were considerably lower than the corresponding values for the undoped composite. X-ray diffraction analysis revealed the formation of new products such as MgO and Fe during the heating process. Our results suggest that MgFe2O4 enhanced the hydrogen storage properties of Na3AlH64LiBH4 through the formation of active species, such as MgO and Fe.  相似文献   

13.
Among different Reactive Hydride Composites (RHCs), the combination of LiBH4 and MgH2 is a promising one for hydrogen storage, providing a high reversible storage capacity. During desorption of both LiBH4 and MgH2, the formation of MgB2 lowers the overall reaction enthalpy. In this work, the material was compacted to pellets for further improvement of the volumetric hydrogen capacity. The influence of compaction pressure on the apparent density, thermal conductivity and sorption behaviour for the Li-based RHC during cycling was investigated for the first time. Although LiBH4 melts during cycling, decrepitation or disaggregation of the pellets is not observed for any of the investigated compaction pressures. However, a strong influence of the compaction pressure on the apparent hydrogen storage capacity is detected. The influence on the reaction kinetics is rather low. To provide explanations for the observed correlations, SEM analysis before and after each sorption step was performed for different compaction pressures. Thus, the low hydrogen sorption in the first cycles and the continuously improving sorption for low pressure compacted pellets with cycling may be explained by some surface observations, along with the form stability of the pellets.  相似文献   

14.
The dehydrogenation/hydrogenation properties of LiBH4-xMg(OH)2 were systematically investigated. The results show that the LiBH4-0.3Mg(OH)2 composite possesses optimal dehydrogenation properties: approximately 9.6 wt% of hydrogen is released via a stepwise reaction with an onset temperature of 100 °C. In the range of 100–250 °C, a chemical reaction between LiBH4 and Mg(OH)2 first occurs to give rise to the generation of LiMgBO3, MgO and H2. From 250 to 390 °C, the newly developed LiMgBO3 reacts with LiBH4 to form MgO, Li3BO3, LiH, B2O3 and Li2B12H12 with hydrogen release. From 390 to 450 °C, the decomposition of LiBH4 and Li2B12H12 proceeds to release additional hydrogen and to form LiH and B. A further hydrogenation experiment indicates that the dehydrogenated LiBH4-0.3Mg(OH)2 sample can take up 4.7 wt% of hydrogen at 450 °C and 100 bar of hydrogen with good cycling stability, which is superior to the pristine LiBH4.  相似文献   

15.
Supersaturated Mg(Al) solid solutions with reduced lattice constants were successfully prepared by ball milling Mg and Al powder mixtures. The microstructure and phase transition were investigated by XRD. The results indicated that disproportionation of supersaturated Mg(Al) solid solution to MgH2 and Al was caused by hydrogenation, then equilibrium Mg(Al) solid solution formed after dehydrogenation, while the intermetallic compound Mg17Al12 reversibly decomposed to MgH2 and intermediate phase Al3Mg2 which could further decompose to MgH2 and Al by hydriding. These reversible phase transitions make Mg–Al alloys show an observably lowered de/hydriding enthalpy and activation energy in comparison with pure Mg.  相似文献   

16.
The hydrogen storage properties of LiAlH4 doped efficient TiN catalyst were systematically investigated. We observe that TiN catalyst enhances the dehydrogenation kinetics and decreases the dehydrogenation temperature of LiAlH4. The dehydrogenation behaviors of 2%TiN–LiAlH4 are investigated using temperature programmed desorption (TPD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Interestingly, the onset hydrogen desorption temperature of 2%TiN–LiAlH4 sample gets lowered from 151.0 °C to 90.0 °C with a faster kinetics, and the dehydrogenation rate reached a maximum value at 137.2 °C. By adding a small amount of as-prepared TiN, approximately 7.1 wt% of hydrogen can be released from the LiAlH4 at 130 °C. Interestingly, the result of the FTIR indicates that the 2%TiN–LiAlH4 maybe restore hydrogen under 5.5 MPa hydrogen. Moreover, 2%TiN–LiAlH4 displayed a substantially reduced activation energy for LiAlH4 dehydrogenation.  相似文献   

17.
In situ neutron diffraction was undertaken on stoichiometric 2LiBD4 : MgD2 and non-stoichiometric 0.3LiBD4:MgD2 with both ratios decomposed under 1 bar deuterium and under dynamic vacuum. The subsequent cycling behaviour under 100 bar D2 at 400 °C was investigated in situ. Analysis of the uptake through formation of deuterided products showed fast kinetics for the magnesium rich system, 0.3:1, with 90% deuteriding occurring within 10 min. This compares to only 60% deuteriding for the 2:1 sample after 4 h under similar conditions. These results demonstrate the strong influence of stoichiometry in the cycling kinetics compared to decomposition conditions, although the later determines the phase progression.  相似文献   

18.
The hydrogen storage performance of MgH2–10 wt.% TiC composite was investigated. The additive TiC nanoparticle led to a pronounced improvement in the de/hydrogenation kinetics of MgH2. The composite could dehydrogenate 6.3 wt.% at 573 K while the milled MgH2 only released 4.9 wt.% of hydrogen at the same condition. The improvement came from that the activation energy of dehydrogenation was decreased from 191.27 kJ mol−1 to 144.62 kJ mol−1 with the TiC additive. The MgH2–10 wt.% TiC composite also absorbed 6.01 wt.% (or 5.1 wt.%) of hydrogen under 1 MPa H2 at 573 K (or 473 K) in 3000 s. Even at 1 MPa H2 and 373 K, it could absorb 4.1 wt.% of hydrogen, but milled MgH2 could not absorb hydrogen at this condition. Additionally, the composite had good cycling stability, and its hydrogen capacity only decreased 3.3% of the first run after 10 de/hydrogenation cycles. The improved hydrogen storage properties were explained to the TiC particles embedded in the MgH2, which provided the pathways for the hydrogen diffusion into the MgH2–10 wt.% TiC composite.  相似文献   

19.
Carbon aerogel (CA) microspheres with highly crumpled graphene–like sheets surface and network internal structure have been successfully prepared by an inverse emulsion polymerization routine, subsequently ball milled with Mg powder to fabricate Mg@CA. The Mg change into MgH2 phases, decorating on the surface of the CA forming MgH2@CA microspheres composite after the hydrogenation process at 400 °C. The MgH2@CA microspheres composite displays MgH2–CA shell–core structure and shows enhanced hydrogenation and dehydrogenation rates. It can quickly uptake 6.2 wt% H2 within 5 min at 275 °C and release 4.9 wt% H2 within 100 min at 350 °C, and the apparent activation energy for the dehydrogenation is decreased to 114.8 kJ mol?1. The enhanced sorption kinetics of the composite is attributed to the effects of the in situ formed MgH2 NPs during the hydrogenation process and the presence of CA. The nanosized MgH2 could reduce the hydrogen diffusion distance, and the CA provides the sites for nucleation and prevents the grains from agglomerating. This novel method of in situ producing MgH2 NPs on zero–dimensional architecture can offer a new horizon for obtaining high performance materials in the hydrogen energy storage field.  相似文献   

20.
The 2LiBH4–MgH2 reactive hydride composite is a promising hydrogen storage system due to the combined high hydrogen capacity and relatively moderate reaction enthalpy. However, the sluggish de/rehydrogenation kinetics severely impedes its practical applications. In this study, graphitic carbon nitride (C3N4) as a metal-free additive was added to the 2LiBH4–MgH2 composite and examined with respect to the promoting effect on the hydrogen storage properties of the composite. Our study found that mechanically milling with small amount of C3N4 additive can eliminate the incubation period between two dehydrogenation steps and thus markedly enhance the dehydrogenation kinetics of the LiBH4–MgH2 composite. Further cyclic study found that the composite with C3N4 additive exhibits improved cyclic dehydrogenation property although it also shows capacity loss upon cycling, particularly in the second cycle. Combined dehydrogenation property, phase analysis and a series of designed experiments suggested that the C3N4 additive could react with both LiBH4 and MgH2 in heating process, and the resulting products may improve the reversible dehydrogenation property of the composite system.  相似文献   

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