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Unconventional Approaches to Hydrogen Sorption Reactions: Non‐Thermal and Non‐Straightforward Thermally Driven Methods
Author(s) -
Ares JoseRamón,
Nevshupa Roman,
MuñozCortés Esmeralda,
Sánchez Carlos,
Leardini Fabrice,
Ferrer IsabelJ.,
Minh Huy Tran Vo,
AgueyZinsou Francois,
Fernández JoseFrancisco
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chemphyschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.016
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1439-7641
pISSN - 1439-4235
DOI - 10.1002/cphc.201801182
Subject(s) - sorption , hydrogen , hydrogen storage , materials science , hydrogen production , hydride , energy carrier , gibbs free energy , context (archaeology) , chemical engineering , recrystallization (geology) , hydrogen fuel , thermodynamics , chemistry , organic chemistry , adsorption , physics , paleontology , biology , engineering
In the last decades, a broad family of hydrides have attracted attention as prospective hydrogen storage materials of very high gravimetric and volumetric capacity, fast H 2 ‐sorption kinetics, environmental friendliness and economical affordability. However, constraints due to their high activation energies of the different H 2 ‐sorption steps and the Gibbs energy of their reaction with H 2 has led to the need of high thermal energy to drive H 2 uptake and release. High heat leads to significant degradation effects (recrystallization, phase segregation, nanoparticles agglomeration…) of the hydrides. In this context, this short review aims to summarize alternative non‐thermal methods and non‐straightforward thermally driven methods to overcome the previous constraints. The phenomenology lying behind these methods, i. e. tribological activation, sonication, and electromagnetic radiation, and the effect of these processes on hydrogen sorption properties of hydrides are described. These non‐usual approaches could boost the capability of the next generation of solid‐hydride materials for hydrogen conversion in energy sector, in mobile devices and as hydrogen reservoirs.