Current Research Trends and Perspectives on Solid-State Nanomaterials in Hydrogen Storage
Author(s) -
Jie Zheng,
ChenGang Wang,
Hui Zhou,
Enyi Ye,
Jianwei Xu,
Zibiao Li,
Xian Jun Loh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.8
H-Index - 16
ISSN - 2639-5274
DOI - 10.34133/2021/3750689
Subject(s) - hydrogen storage , nanotechnology , hydrogen fuel , nanoporous , energy storage , hydrogen , fossil fuel , materials science , renewable energy , nanomaterials , energy carrier , process engineering , waste management , chemistry , engineering , organic chemistry , electrical engineering , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics
Hydrogen energy, with environment amicable, renewable, efficiency, and cost-effective advantages, is the future mainstream substitution of fossil-based fuel. However, the extremely low volumetric density gives rise to the main challenge in hydrogen storage, and therefore, exploring effective storage techniques is key hurdles that need to be crossed to accomplish the sustainable hydrogen economy. Hydrogen physically or chemically stored into nanomaterials in the solid-state is a desirable prospect for effective large-scale hydrogen storage, which has exhibited great potentials for applications in both reversible onboard storage and regenerable off-board storage applications. Its attractive points include safe, compact, light, reversibility, and efficiently produce sufficient pure hydrogen fuel under the mild condition. This review comprehensively gathers the state-of-art solid-state hydrogen storage technologies using nanostructured materials, involving nanoporous carbon materials, metal-organic frameworks, covalent organic frameworks, porous aromatic frameworks, nanoporous organic polymers, and nanoscale hydrides. It describes significant advances achieved so far, and main barriers need to be surmounted to approach practical applications, as well as offers a perspective for sustainable energy research.
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