Hydrogen is a promising candidate for renewable energy storage and transportation due to its high energy density and zero carbon emissions. Its practical applications face challenges related to safe, efficient storage and release systems. This review article investigates advanced nanostructured materials for hydrogen storage, including metal acetylide and cyanide complexes, B,N-doped γ-graphyne nanotubes (γ-GNT), lithium-phosphide double helices, and Ni-decorated carbon-based clusters. Density Functional Theory (DFT) based computations are used to analyze binding energies, thermodynamic stability, and adsorption mechanisms. Ni-decorated CN nanoclusters demonstrate enhanced storage capacities, binding up to eight H molecules with a favorable N-(μ-Ni)-N configuration. Lithium-phosphide double helices show potential for 9.6 wt% hydrogen storage within a stable, semiconducting framework. Functionalization of γ-GNT with OLi at boron-doped sites significantly enhances storage potential, achieving optimal hydrogen binding energies for practical applications. Additionally, metal acetylide and cyanide complexes, stabilized by noble gas insertion, display thermodynamically favorable hydrogen adsorption. These results highlight the potential of these functionalized nanostructures for achieving high-capacity, reversible hydrogen storage. The nanostructures in this study, such as γ-graphyne nanotubes (γ-GNT), lithium-phosphide double helices, metal acetylide and cyanide complexes, and Ni-decorated carbon-based clusters, are selected based on their ability to exhibit complementary hydrogen adsorption mechanisms, including physisorption and chemisorption. γ-GNT offers high surface area and tunable electronic properties, ideal for physisorption enhanced by heteroatom doping. Lithium-phosphide double helices facilitate Kubas-like chemisorption through unsaturated lithium centers. Metal acetylide and cyanide complexes stabilize hydrogen adsorption via charge transfer and conjugated frameworks, while Ni-decorated clusters combine polarization-induced physisorption. These materials represent a strategic approach to addressing the challenges of hydrogen storage through diverse and synergistic mechanisms. The review also addresses challenges and outlines future directions to advance hydrogen's role as a sustainable fuel.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2025.1525140 | DOI Listing |
Adv Mater
March 2025
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, The University of Chicago, 5801 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA.
Rechargeable aqueous batteries based on metallic anodes hold tremendous potential of high energy density enabled by the combination of relatively low working potential and large capacity while retaining the intrinsic safety nature and economical value of aqueous systems; However, the realization of these promised advantages relies on the identification of an ideal metal anode chemistry with all these merits. In this review, the emerging Sn metal anode chemistry is examined as such an anode candidate in both acidic and alkaline media, where the inertness of Sn toward hydrogen evolution, flat low voltage profile, and low polarization make it a unique metal anode for aqueous batteries. From a panoramic viewpoint, the key challenges and detrimental issues of Sn metal batteries are discussed, including dead Sn formation, self-discharge, and electrolyte degradation, as well as strategies for mitigating these issues by constructing robust Sn anodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcc Chem Res
March 2025
Frontier Institute of Science and Technology and State Key Laboratory of Multi-phase Flow in Power Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 712046, China.
ConspectusFor sustainable development, exploring renewable resources is an urgent priority. Nonfood biomass, one of the largest renewable resources on Earth, primarily comprises three key components: lignin (ca. 15-30%), cellulose (ca.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol Rep
April 2025
Equinor ASA, Stavanger, Norway.
Hydrogen storage in salt caverns is important for supporting the energy transition. However, there is limited knowledge about microbial communities within these caverns and associated risks of hydrogen loss. In this study we characterised a salt-saturated brine from a salt cavern and found a high sulphate content (4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoods
February 2025
Agro-Products Processing Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Kunming 650223, China.
To investigate the effects of lemongrass essential oil on the key volatile aroma compounds of pickled radish (PR) during storage, this study used headspace-gas chromatography-ion mobility spectrometry, fingerprint analysis, multivariate statistical analysis, and molecular docking to study different PR samples. The results indicated that a total of 48 volatile aromatic compounds were identified. Fingerprint analysis revealed that the aroma profiles of samples at different storage stages were different.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
February 2025
Electrochemical Power Sources Division, CSIR-Central Electrochemical Research Institute, Karaikudi 630003, India.
Although silicon-based anodes have been identified as a potential alternative to conventional graphite anodes, the huge volume change (approximately 300%) that occurs in silicon while cycling still impedes this system from practical applications. In the case of silicon-suboxide (SiO)-based anode materials, both LiO and LiSiO are formed during the initial lithiation processes and act as a natural volume buffer matrix to accommodate volume changes and the formation of a stable SEI layer, which improves the cyclability and capacity retention. In this study, a series of SiO/Si/C-based electrodes composed of different amorphous SiO, Si, and graphitic carbon contents were prepared.
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