TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of Ti-EG-Ni Dual-Metal Organic Crystal-Derived TiO2/C/Ni on the Hydrogen Storage Performance of MgH2
AU - Wang, Lei
AU - Zhao, Baozhou
AU - Liu, Jiangchuan
AU - Yuan, Jianguang
AU - Zhu, Yunfeng
AU - Liu, Bogu
AU - Wu, Ying
AU - Li, Liquan
AU - Cheng, Yong
AU - Zhou, S. X.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/3/12
Y1 - 2025/3/12
N2 - To effectively address the kinetic sluggishness associated with MgH2, this study utilized Ti-EG-Ni dual-metal organic crystal as precursors and employed carburization to prepare the unique rod-shaped structure TiO2/C/Ni. The catalyst was incorporated into MgH2 by ball milling, demonstrating excellent hydrogen storage performance. The composite of MgH2-8 wt % TiO2/C/Ni exhibited a lower initial dehydrogenation temperature of 185 °C and a marked dehydrogenation activation energy of 60.537 kJ/mol. At 300 and 150 °C, it only required 300 s to release 6.17 wt % H2 and absorb 5.72 wt % H2 within 20 s, respectively. Additionally, the composites demonstrated excellent cycling stability, maintaining 94% reversible capacity after 50 cycles. Theoretical computations suggested that the in situ-generated metal Mg2Ni and semiconductor TiO2 created a Schottky heterojunction, which stimulated an internal electric field between Ni and TiO2, accelerating electron transfer. The strong electronic interaction between the catalyst and MgH2 weakened the Mg-H bond energy and elongated the Mg-H bond, promoting hydrogen dissociation. During hydrogen absorption and desorption, the composite material exhibited excellent hydrogen storage performance due to the uniform distribution of elements, the in situ-generated catalytic active sites (multivalent Ti and Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4), and the support provided by carbon to the nanostructures.
AB - To effectively address the kinetic sluggishness associated with MgH2, this study utilized Ti-EG-Ni dual-metal organic crystal as precursors and employed carburization to prepare the unique rod-shaped structure TiO2/C/Ni. The catalyst was incorporated into MgH2 by ball milling, demonstrating excellent hydrogen storage performance. The composite of MgH2-8 wt % TiO2/C/Ni exhibited a lower initial dehydrogenation temperature of 185 °C and a marked dehydrogenation activation energy of 60.537 kJ/mol. At 300 and 150 °C, it only required 300 s to release 6.17 wt % H2 and absorb 5.72 wt % H2 within 20 s, respectively. Additionally, the composites demonstrated excellent cycling stability, maintaining 94% reversible capacity after 50 cycles. Theoretical computations suggested that the in situ-generated metal Mg2Ni and semiconductor TiO2 created a Schottky heterojunction, which stimulated an internal electric field between Ni and TiO2, accelerating electron transfer. The strong electronic interaction between the catalyst and MgH2 weakened the Mg-H bond energy and elongated the Mg-H bond, promoting hydrogen dissociation. During hydrogen absorption and desorption, the composite material exhibited excellent hydrogen storage performance due to the uniform distribution of elements, the in situ-generated catalytic active sites (multivalent Ti and Mg2Ni/Mg2NiH4), and the support provided by carbon to the nanostructures.
KW - electron transfer
KW - hydrogen storage
KW - MgH
KW - multivalent multielement catalytic
KW - TiO/C/Ni nanorod catalyst
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001082482&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.4c18239
DO - 10.1021/acsami.4c18239
M3 - 文章
C2 - 39998421
AN - SCOPUS:105001082482
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 17
SP - 15274
EP - 15286
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 10
ER -