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Understanding the reaction pathway of lithium borohydride-hydroxide-based multi-component systems for enhanced hydrogen storage

Munshi, Sweta; Walker, Gavin S.; Manickam, Kandavel; Hansen, Thomas; Dornheim, Martin; Grant, David M.

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Authors

Gavin S. Walker

Kandavel Manickam

Thomas Hansen

Professor MARTIN DORNHEIM MARTIN.DORNHEIM@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
THE LEVERHULME INTERNATIONAL PROFESSOR OF HYDROGEN STORAGE MATERIALS AND SYSTEMS



Abstract

Complex hydride-metal hydroxide multicomponent hydrogen storage systems have high potential for hydrogen storage because their dehydrogenation thermodynamics can be tuned while maintaining a high hydrogen storage capacity. Out of all the ratios explored using lithium borohydride and lithium hydroxide (LiBH4-xLiOH, x = 1, 3, 4), a particularly promising system is LiBH4-3LiOH with a maximum storage capacity of 7.47 wt%. Thermal and diffraction studies along with in situ neutron diffraction reveal new insights into the intermediate phases involved in the reaction pathway, enabling the identification of a detailed reaction schematic. The onset decomposition temperature was reduced to 220 °C for the hand-milled 1 : 3 system, releasing 6 wt% of H2 by 370 °C. Li3BO3 was the main decomposition product. Other than a small trace of water, no toxic gas release was detected along with the H2 release. Ball-milling showed improved reaction kinetics by releasing around 6 wt% between 200 and 260 °C in one step. The destabilization was achieved through the coupling reaction between Hδ− in [BH4]− and Hδ+ in [OH]−. Among all the catalysts investigated, the addition of 5 wt% NiCl2 led to further improvement in reaction kinetics. This resulted in a decrease in the onset decomposition temperature to 80 °C and released 6 wt% of H2 below 300 °C. The systems have exhibited improvements in kinetics and operational temperature, showing potential as a single use hydrogen storage material.

Citation

Munshi, S., Walker, G. S., Manickam, K., Hansen, T., Dornheim, M., & Grant, D. M. (2024). Understanding the reaction pathway of lithium borohydride-hydroxide-based multi-component systems for enhanced hydrogen storage. Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 12(41), 28326-28336. https://doi.org/10.1039/d4ta05368k

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 10, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 13, 2024
Publication Date Nov 7, 2024
Deposit Date Oct 24, 2024
Publicly Available Date Oct 28, 2024
Journal Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Print ISSN 2050-7488
Electronic ISSN 2050-7496
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Issue 41
Pages 28326-28336
DOI https://doi.org/10.1039/d4ta05368k
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/40000348

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