Lithium hexahydridoaluminate Li(3)AlH(6) and lithium amide LiNH(2) with 1:2 molar ratio were mechanically milled, yielding a Li-Al-N-H system. LiNH(2) destabilized Li(3)AlH(6) during the dehydrogenation process of Li(3)AlH(6), because the dehydrogenation starting temperature of the Li-Al-N-H system was lower than that of Li(3)AlH(6). Temperature-programmed desorption scans of the Li-Al-N-H system indicated that a large amount of hydrogen (6.9 wt %) can be released between 370 and 773 K. After initial H(2) desorption, the H(2) absorption and the desorption capacities of the Li-Al-N-H system with a nano-Ni catalyst exhibited 3-4 wt % at 10-0.004 MPa and 473-573 K, while the capacities of the system without the catalyst were 1-2 wt %. The remarkably increased capacity was due to the fact that the kinetics was improved by addition of the nano-Ni catalyst.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp060525z | DOI Listing |
Dalton Trans
April 2016
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Centro Atómico Bariloche (CNEA) and Instituto Balseiro (UNCu), Av. Bustillo 9500, R8402AGP Bariloche, Río Negro, Argentina.
New amide-chloride phases were successfully synthesized by mechanical milling of the LiNH2-AlCl3 mixture at a molar ratio of 1 : 0.11 and further heating at 150 °C under argon (0.1 MPa) or under hydrogen pressure (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
July 2006
Department of Metallurgical Engineering, University of Utah, 135 South 1460 East Room 412, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Complex metal hydrides are considered as a class of candidate materials for hydrogen storage. Lithium-based complex hydrides including lithium alanates (LiAlH(4) and Li(3)AlH(6)) are among the most promising materials owing to its high hydrogen content. In the present work, we investigated dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation reactions of a combined system of Li(3)AlH(6) and LiNH(2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
May 2006
Toyota Central R&D Labs, Inc., Nagakute-cho, Aichi-gun, Aichi, 480-1192, Japan.
Lithium hexahydridoaluminate Li(3)AlH(6) and lithium amide LiNH(2) with 1:2 molar ratio were mechanically milled, yielding a Li-Al-N-H system. LiNH(2) destabilized Li(3)AlH(6) during the dehydrogenation process of Li(3)AlH(6), because the dehydrogenation starting temperature of the Li-Al-N-H system was lower than that of Li(3)AlH(6). Temperature-programmed desorption scans of the Li-Al-N-H system indicated that a large amount of hydrogen (6.
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