Reversing the Irreversible: Thermodynamic Stabilization of LiAlH4 Nanoconfined Within a Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Host
Author(s) -
YongJun Cho,
Sichi Li,
Jonathan L. Snider,
Maxwell A. T. Marple,
Nicholas A. Strange,
Joshua D. Sugar,
Farid El Gabaly,
Andreas Schneemann,
Sungsu Kang,
Minho Kang,
Hayoung Park,
Jungwon Park,
Liwen F. Wan,
Harris E. Mason,
Mark D. Allendorf,
Brandon C. Wood,
Eun Seon Cho,
Vitalie Stavila
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.1c02079
Subject(s) - metastability , hydride , density functional theory , hydrogen storage , materials science , hydrogen , chemical physics , dissociation (chemistry) , redistribution (election) , nitrogen , carbon fibers , metal , chemistry , thermodynamics , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , composite number , metallurgy , composite material , politics , political science , law
A general problem when designing functional nanomaterials for energy storage is the lack of control over the stability and reactivity of metastable phases. Using the high-capacity hydrogen storage candidate LiAlH 4 as an exemplar, we demonstrate an alternative approach to the thermodynamic stabilization of metastable metal hydrides by coordination to nitrogen binding sites within the nanopores of N-doped CMK-3 carbon (NCMK-3). The resulting LiAlH 4 @NCMK-3 material releases H 2 at temperatures as low as 126 °C with full decomposition below 240 °C, bypassing the usual Li 3 AlH 6 intermediate observed in bulk. Moreover, >80% of LiAlH 4 can be regenerated under 100 MPa H 2 , a feat previously thought to be impossible. Nitrogen sites are critical to these improvements, as no reversibility is observed with undoped CMK-3. Density functional theory predicts a drastically reduced Al-H bond dissociation energy and supports the observed change in the reaction pathway. The calculations also provide a rationale for the solid-state reversibility, which derives from the combined effects of nanoconfinement, Li adatom formation, and charge redistribution between the metal hydride and the host.
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