Because of its high thermal stability and poor hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics, magnesium hydride (MgH) requires mechanical treatment and/or doping with catalytic agents(s) to understand the decomposition temperature and accelerate the gas uptake/release kinetics. Whereas all catalytic species used for this purpose are crystalline materials, in this paper use of titanium nickel (TiNi) metallic glassy (MG) nanopowders for enhancing the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics behavior of MgH powders is reported. In the present research, MG-TiNi ribbons, prepared using a melt spinning technique were snipped into small pieces and then cryo-milled under a flow of liquid nitrogen to obtain submicron-powders (500 nm). The as-prepared MgH powders were doped with 10 wt% of the glassy powder and then cryo-milled for 25 h. The structural and morphological analysis indicated that the cryo-milling process succeeded in maintaining the short-range order structure of MG-TiNi, and in reducing the MgH grain size to the nanolevel. The results showed that the as-prepared nanocomposite powders obtained after 25 h of cryo-milling decomposed at 283 °C, with an apparent activation energy of 87.3 kJ mol. The MgH/10 wt% MG-TiNi nanocomposite powders were cold rolled into thin strips, using a cold rolling technique. These cold rolled strips possessed excellent morphological characteristics, shown by the homogeneous distribution of the MgH spherical particles (10 nm in diameter) in the glassy TiNi matrix. Furthermore, the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics measured at 225 °C were very fast, as indicated by the short time (400 s) required to uptake/release 5.7 wt% H. At this temperature, the system possessed good life-time cycling performance - achieving 84 continuous cycles within 30 h without failure or degradation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9059543PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra08200fDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics
16
metallic glassy
8
glassy tini
8
enhancing hydrogenation/dehydrogenation
8
mgh powders
8
nanocomposite powders
8
cold rolled
8
mgh
6
kinetics
5
tini grain-growth
4

Similar Publications

Tuning of Zr content in TiMn based multinary alloys by powder metallurgy to fabricate superior hydrogen storage properties.

J Colloid Interface Sci

March 2025

Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Materials Genome Engineering, Institute for Advanced Materials and Technology, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China; Shanxi Beike Qiantong Energy Storage Science and Technology Research Institute Co.Ltd., Gaoping 048400, China. Electronic address:

TiMn based multinary alloys make full use of the high abundance of rare earth resources in attractive applications of hydrogen storage but suffer from mediocre hydrogen ab/desorption kinetics and lack the in-depth mechanism analysis of hydrogenation/dehydrogenation behavior. Herein, on the basis of current research on compositional modulation, we utilize the low-cost powder metallurgy method to prepare TiZrMnCrV (x = -0.05, 0, 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, two series of samples (r-Pt/TiO prepared with a hydrogen pretreatment and r-Pt/TiO prepared with an oxygen pretreatment) were prepared by treating commercial TiO supports in different atmospheres to establish different TiO interfacial structures, followed by the addition of platinum nanoparticles (NPs) for the catalyzed hydrogenation/dehydrogenation cycle of -ethylcarbazole (NEC). The kinetic analysis and reaction mechanism were investigated by combining XRD, Raman, CO-DRIFT, HRTEM, XPS, H-TPD and DFT calculations. It was found that the performance of the samples for the NEC system's cyclic hydrogen storage could be modulated by treating the TiO interfacial structure with different atmospheres varying the extent of strong metal-support interaction (SMSI).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Magnesium hydride (MgH) is a promising hydrogen storage candidate due to its large capacity; however, high dehydrogenation temperature and slow kinetic rates are the main bottlenecks. Herein, we proposed a strategy for designing nitrogen-doped graphene-supported Ni nanoparticles (NPs) (Ni@NC) to tackle these problems. The results showed that the MgH + 15 wt % Ni@NC nanocomposite reduced the on-set dehydrogenation temperature to 195 °C, which was 175 °C lower than pristine MgH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The MgH-carbonic combustion product of the anthracene (CCPA) composite was synthesized by hydrogen combustion and mechanically ball-milled method to simultaneously achieve confinement by the formed amorphous carbon. The amorphous carbon derived from the carbonic combustion product of anthracene in the MgH-CCPA composite led to a significant increase in hydrogen sorption characteristics. The onset dehydrogenation temperature for the MgH-CCPA composite was reduced to 589 K, which was 54 K less than that of pure milled MgH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Honeycomb ZrCo Intermetallic for High Performance Hydrogen and Hydrogen Isotope Storage.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

January 2023

School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing 100191, China.

Hydrogen isotope storage materials are of great significance for controlled nuclear fusion, which is promising to provide unlimited clean and dense energy. Conventional storage materials of micrometer-sized polycrystalline ZrCo alloys prepared by the smelting method suffer from slow kinetics, pulverization, disproportionation, and poor cycling stability. Here, we synthesize a honeycomb-structured ZrCo composed of highly crystalline submicrometer ZrCo units using electrospray deposition and magnesiothermic reduction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!