Title of article
Room-temperature hydrogen release from activated carbon-confined ammonia borane
Author/Authors
Moussa، نويسنده , , Georges and Bernard، نويسنده , , Samuel and Demirci، نويسنده , , Umit B. and Chiriac، نويسنده , , Rodica and Miele، نويسنده , , Philippe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
9
From page
13437
To page
13445
Abstract
In chemical hydrogen storage, nanoconfinement (or nanoscaffolding) is an efficient approach to reduce the size of the particles of boron hydrides such as ammonia borane (AB, NH3BH3) at nanoscale while destabilizing its molecular network. It involves the dehydrogenation of AB at temperatures lower than 100 °C and hinders the formation of undesired gaseous by-products such as borazine. Herein, commercial activated carbon (AC) with a specific surface area of 716 m2 g−1 and a porous volume of 0.36 cm3 g−1 was used as host material for AB nanoconfinement. A composite activated carbon-ammonia borane (AC@AB) was successfully prepared by infiltration in cold conditions (0 °C). Its dehydrogenation was followed by volumetric method, FTIR, XRD, TGA, DSC, GC–MS and 11B MAS NMR. The most striking result is that the nanoconfined AB, being highly destabilized, dehydrogenates in ambient conditions, even at 3–4 °C. It is demonstrated that dihydrogen is formed according to two pathways that simultaneously take place. The first one is the dehydrogenation through inter- and/or intra-molecular reactions between protonic H and hydridic H of AB, and the second one is the acid-base reaction between protonic H of COO−H groups present on the AC surface and hydridic H of AB.
Keywords
Activated carbon , Chemical hydrogen storage , Ammonia borane , Nanoconfinement , Nanoscaffolding
Journal title
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Record number
1672949
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