Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage

Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === Magnesium hydride has long been regarded as a promising candidate for lightweight hydrogen storage applications, owing to reasonably high theoretical capacity (7.6 wt. %). It is burdened by slow absorption/desorption kinetics which has been the target for improvement of...

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Main Author: Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean
Other Authors: Lototskyy, Mykhaylo
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6782
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-67822019-07-19T03:12:45Z Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean Lototskyy, Mykhaylo Yartys, V Khotseng, L. Hydrogen storage Magnesium hydride Nanocomposites High-energy reactive ball milling Philosophiae Doctor - PhD Magnesium hydride has long been regarded as a promising candidate for lightweight hydrogen storage applications, owing to reasonably high theoretical capacity (7.6 wt. %). It is burdened by slow absorption/desorption kinetics which has been the target for improvement of many research groups over the years. Nanostructured MgH2 prepared by high energy reactive ball milling (HRBM) of Mg under hydrogen atmosphere with the addition of V or Ti results in modified MgH2 that demonstrates superior hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics without a crippling compromise in storage capacity. Mg – FeV nanocomposites prepared via ball milling of Mg and FeV raw materials demonstrated up to 96.4% of the theoretical storage capacity and comparable kinetics to Mg - V prepared via the same method using pure refined V (which is far costlier than FeV). In both cases, the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics was much improved than pure Mg alone, as evidenced by faster hydrogenation times. In terms of cyclic stability, Mg – 10FeV demonstrated improvement over pure Mg with final absorption and desorption capacities of 4.93 ± 0.02 wt. % and 4.82 ± 0.02 wt. % respectively over 30 cycles. When compared against Mg – V, Mg – FeV showed slightly inferior improvements, attributed to incomplete hydrogenation of V in the presence of Fe. However, they share similar crystalline BCC, BCT – V2H and FCC - VH phases with the size of less than 10 nm and demonstrated the same behaviour at high temperatures; at temperatures approaching 400 °C, particle sintering became an issue for both nanocomposites resulting in a drop in absorption capacity even in the first cycle. The further inclusion of carbonaceous species showed several effects, one of which was an improvement in hydrogen uptake speed as well as kinetics for the addition of 5 wt. % activated carbon. For the sample with 5 wt. % graphite, the appearance of an initial incubation period of up to 60 minutes was noted, presumably corresponding to the duration of time when the carbon was sheared and crushed before hydrogenation commences. 2019-05-13T07:55:40Z 2019-05-13T07:55:40Z 2019 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6782 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Hydrogen storage
Magnesium hydride
Nanocomposites
High-energy reactive ball milling
spellingShingle Hydrogen storage
Magnesium hydride
Nanocomposites
High-energy reactive ball milling
Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean
Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
description Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === Magnesium hydride has long been regarded as a promising candidate for lightweight hydrogen storage applications, owing to reasonably high theoretical capacity (7.6 wt. %). It is burdened by slow absorption/desorption kinetics which has been the target for improvement of many research groups over the years. Nanostructured MgH2 prepared by high energy reactive ball milling (HRBM) of Mg under hydrogen atmosphere with the addition of V or Ti results in modified MgH2 that demonstrates superior hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics without a crippling compromise in storage capacity. Mg – FeV nanocomposites prepared via ball milling of Mg and FeV raw materials demonstrated up to 96.4% of the theoretical storage capacity and comparable kinetics to Mg - V prepared via the same method using pure refined V (which is far costlier than FeV). In both cases, the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics was much improved than pure Mg alone, as evidenced by faster hydrogenation times. In terms of cyclic stability, Mg – 10FeV demonstrated improvement over pure Mg with final absorption and desorption capacities of 4.93 ± 0.02 wt. % and 4.82 ± 0.02 wt. % respectively over 30 cycles. When compared against Mg – V, Mg – FeV showed slightly inferior improvements, attributed to incomplete hydrogenation of V in the presence of Fe. However, they share similar crystalline BCC, BCT – V2H and FCC - VH phases with the size of less than 10 nm and demonstrated the same behaviour at high temperatures; at temperatures approaching 400 °C, particle sintering became an issue for both nanocomposites resulting in a drop in absorption capacity even in the first cycle. The further inclusion of carbonaceous species showed several effects, one of which was an improvement in hydrogen uptake speed as well as kinetics for the addition of 5 wt. % activated carbon. For the sample with 5 wt. % graphite, the appearance of an initial incubation period of up to 60 minutes was noted, presumably corresponding to the duration of time when the carbon was sheared and crushed before hydrogenation commences.
author2 Lototskyy, Mykhaylo
author_facet Lototskyy, Mykhaylo
Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean
author Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean
author_sort Goh, Jonathan Teik Ean
title Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
title_short Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
title_full Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
title_fullStr Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
title_full_unstemmed Advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
title_sort advanced materials on the basis of nanostructured catalysed magnesium hydride for hydrogen storage
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6782
work_keys_str_mv AT gohjonathanteikean advancedmaterialsonthebasisofnanostructuredcatalysedmagnesiumhydrideforhydrogenstorage
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