Hydrogen cycling of niobium and vanadium catalyzed nanostructured magnesium.

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Radiation, Radionuclides and Reactors, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Delft University of Technology, Mekelweg 15, 2629JB Delft, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • The reaction of hydrogen gas with magnesium is significantly improved by using catalysts like niobium (Nb) and vanadium (V) and by employing nanostructured magnesium powders.
  • In situ neutron diffraction studies reveal unique phases during hydrogen cycling, notably a MgH(1< x < 2) phase in small magnesium particles, which enhances hydrogen diffusion compared to bulk MgH(2).
  • Though vanadium isn’t visible in diffraction patterns, it forms very small particles (2-20 nm), and the use of catalysts accelerates hydrogen absorption, shifting limitations from slow kinetics to temperature variations.

Article Abstract

The reaction of hydrogen gas with magnesium metal, which is important for hydrogen storage purposes, is enhanced significantly by the addition of catalysts such as Nb and V and by using nanostructured powders. In situ neutron diffraction on MgNb(0.05) and MgV(0.05) powders give a detailed insight on the magnesium and catalyst phases that exist during the various stages of hydrogen cycling. During the early stage of hydriding (and deuteriding), a MgH(1< x < 2) phase is observed, which does not occur in bulk MgH(2) and, thus, appears characteristic for the small particles. The abundant H vacancies will cause this phase to have a much larger hydrogen diffusion coefficient, partly explaining the enhanced kinetics of nanostructured magnesium. It is shown that under relevant experimental conditions, the niobium catalyst is present as NbH(1). Second, a hitherto unknown Mg-Nb perovskite phase could be identified that has to result from mechanical alloying of Nb and the MgO layer of the particles. Vanadium is not visible in the diffraction patterns, but electron micrographs show that the V particle size becomes very small, 2-20 nm. Nanostructuring and catalyzing the Mg enhance the adsorption speed that much that now temperature variations effectively limit the absorption speed and not, as for bulk, the slow kinetics through bulk MgH(2) layers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja051508aDOI Listing

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