Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7722591 | International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2013 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Mg can store up to â¼7 wt.% hydrogen and has great potential as light-weight and low cost hydrogen storage materials. However hydrogen sorption in Mg typically requires â¼573 K, whereas the target operation temperature of fuel cells in automobiles is â¼373 K or less. Here we demonstrate that stress-induced orthorhombic Mg hydride (O-MgH2) is thermodynamically destabilized at â¼Â 373 K or lower. Such drastic destabilization arises from large tensile stress in single layer O-MgH2 bonded to rigid substrate, or compressive stress due to large volume change incompatibility in Mg/Nb multilayers. Hydrogen (H2) desorption occurred at room temperature in O-MgH2 10 nm/O-NbH 10 nm multilayers. Ab initio calculations show that constraints imposed by the thin-film environment can significantly reduce hydride formation enthalpy, verifying the experimental observations. These studies provide key insight on the mechanisms that can significantly destabilize Mg hydride and other type of metal hydrides.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
B. Ham, A. Junkaew, R. Arroyave, J. Chen, H. Wang, P. Wang, J. Majewski, J. Park, H.-C. Zhou, Ravi K. Arvapally, Ushasree Kaipa, Mohammad A. Omary, X.Y. Zhang, Y. Ren, X. Zhang,