Literature DB >> 19420674

Hydrogen storage in engineered carbon nanospaces.

Jacob Burress1, Michael Kraus, Matt Beckner, Raina Cepel, Galen Suppes, Carlos Wexler, Peter Pfeifer.   

Abstract

It is shown how appropriately engineered nanoporous carbons provide materials for reversible hydrogen storage, based on physisorption, with exceptional storage capacities (approximately 80 g H2/kg carbon, approximately 50 g H2/liter carbon, at 50 bar and 77 K). Nanopores generate high storage capacities (a) by having high surface area to volume ratios, and (b) by hosting deep potential wells through overlapping substrate potentials from opposite pore walls, giving rise to a binding energy nearly twice the binding energy in wide pores. Experimental case studies are presented with surface areas as high as 3100 m(2) g(-1), in which 40% of all surface sites reside in pores of width approximately 0.7 nm and binding energy approximately 9 kJ mol(-1), and 60% of sites in pores of width>1.0 nm and binding energy approximately 5 kJ mol(-1). The findings, including the prevalence of just two distinct binding energies, are in excellent agreement with results from molecular dynamics simulations. It is also shown, from statistical mechanical models, that one can experimentally distinguish between the situation in which molecules do (mobile adsorption) and do not (localized adsorption) move parallel to the surface, how such lateral dynamics affects the hydrogen storage capacity, and how the two situations are controlled by the vibrational frequencies of adsorbed hydrogen molecules parallel and perpendicular to the surface: in the samples presented, adsorption is mobile at 293 K, and localized at 77 K. These findings make a strong case for it being possible to significantly increase hydrogen storage capacities in nanoporous carbons by suitable engineering of the nanopore space.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19420674     DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/20/20/204026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nanotechnology        ISSN: 0957-4484            Impact factor:   3.874


  1 in total

1.  Open carbon frameworks - a search for optimal geometry for hydrogen storage.

Authors:  Bogdan Kuchta; Lucyna Firlej; Ali Mohammadhosseini; Matthew Beckner; Jimmy Romanos; Peter Pfeifer
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2012-12-07       Impact factor: 1.810

  1 in total

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