Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂

Maintaining fast hydrogen storage kinetics is a key challenge for the practical application of MgH2. To address this challenge, understanding the mechanism of kinetics that declines during cycling is crucial but it has not been systematically investigated to date. In this paper, three different Fe...

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Main Authors: Song, Mengchen, Zhang, Liuting, Yao, Zhendong, Zheng, Jiaguang, Shang, Danhong, Chen, Lixin, Li, Hong
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163054
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1630542022-11-18T01:35:42Z Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂ Song, Mengchen Zhang, Liuting Yao, Zhendong Zheng, Jiaguang Shang, Danhong Chen, Lixin Li, Hong School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Engineering::Mechanical engineering Activation Energy Capacity Retention Maintaining fast hydrogen storage kinetics is a key challenge for the practical application of MgH2. To address this challenge, understanding the mechanism of kinetics that declines during cycling is crucial but it has not been systematically investigated to date. In this paper, three different Fe nanocatalysts were synthesized and then doped into MgH2 to form new composites. The MgH2-Fe composite had significantly reduced operating temperatures and activation energy compared to that of undoped MgH2. During cycling, a capacity retention of 93.4% was obtained after the 20th cycle. For a better understanding of the declining performance, prolonged incubation was intentionally performed. Grain growth was found in MgH2 and the Fe nanocatalysts, which was directly responsible for capacity loss and kinetic degradation. These findings provide fundamental insights to facilitate designing and preparing catalytic hydrogen storage systems with superior cycling performance. Submitted/Accepted version The authors appreciatively acknowledge the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 51801078) and the Nature Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (Grant No. BK202110884). 2022-11-18T01:35:41Z 2022-11-18T01:35:41Z 2022 Journal Article Song, M., Zhang, L., Yao, Z., Zheng, J., Shang, D., Chen, L. & Li, H. (2022). Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂. Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers, 9(15), 3874-3884. https://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D2QI00863G 2052-1553 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163054 10.1039/D2QI00863G 15 9 3874 3884 en Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers © 2022 the Partner Organisations. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Royal Society of Chemistry in Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers and is made available with permission of the Partner Organisations. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Activation Energy
Capacity Retention
spellingShingle Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Activation Energy
Capacity Retention
Song, Mengchen
Zhang, Liuting
Yao, Zhendong
Zheng, Jiaguang
Shang, Danhong
Chen, Lixin
Li, Hong
Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
description Maintaining fast hydrogen storage kinetics is a key challenge for the practical application of MgH2. To address this challenge, understanding the mechanism of kinetics that declines during cycling is crucial but it has not been systematically investigated to date. In this paper, three different Fe nanocatalysts were synthesized and then doped into MgH2 to form new composites. The MgH2-Fe composite had significantly reduced operating temperatures and activation energy compared to that of undoped MgH2. During cycling, a capacity retention of 93.4% was obtained after the 20th cycle. For a better understanding of the declining performance, prolonged incubation was intentionally performed. Grain growth was found in MgH2 and the Fe nanocatalysts, which was directly responsible for capacity loss and kinetic degradation. These findings provide fundamental insights to facilitate designing and preparing catalytic hydrogen storage systems with superior cycling performance.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Song, Mengchen
Zhang, Liuting
Yao, Zhendong
Zheng, Jiaguang
Shang, Danhong
Chen, Lixin
Li, Hong
format Article
author Song, Mengchen
Zhang, Liuting
Yao, Zhendong
Zheng, Jiaguang
Shang, Danhong
Chen, Lixin
Li, Hong
author_sort Song, Mengchen
title Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
title_short Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
title_full Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
title_fullStr Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
title_full_unstemmed Unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of Fe nanocatalyst-modified MgH₂
title_sort unraveling the degradation mechanism for the hydrogen storage property of fe nanocatalyst-modified mgh₂
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163054
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