MgH2-based hydrogen storage materials are promising candidates for solid-state hydrogen storage allowing efficient thermal management in energy systems integrating metal hydride hydrogen store with a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) providing dissipated heat at temperatures between 400 and 600 °C. Recently, we have shown that graphite-modified composite of TiH2 and MgH2 prepared by high-energy reactive ball milling in hydrogen (HRBM), demonstrates a high reversible gravimetric H storage capacity exceeding 5 wt % H, fast hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics and excellent cycle stability. In present study, 0.9 MgH2 + 0.1 TiH2 +5 wt %C nanocomposite with a maximum hydrogen storage capacity of 6.3 wt% H was prepared by HRBM preceded by a short homogenizing pre-milling in inert gas. 300 g of the composite was loaded into a storage tank accommodating an air-heated stainless steel metal hydride (MH) container equipped with transversal internal (copper) and external (aluminium) fins. Tests of the tank were carried out in a temperature range from 150 °C (H2 absorption) to 370 °C (H2 desorption) and showed its ability to deliver up to 185 NL H2 corresponding to a reversible H storage capacity of the MH material of appr. 5 wt% H. No significant deterioration of the reversible H storage capacity was observed during 20 heating/cooling H2 discharge/charge cycles. It was found that H2 desorption performance can be tailored by selecting appropriate thermal management conditions and an optimal operational regime has been proposed.

200 NL H2 hydrogen storage tank using MgH2–TiH2–C nanocomposite as H storage material

Capurso G;
2021-01-01

Abstract

MgH2-based hydrogen storage materials are promising candidates for solid-state hydrogen storage allowing efficient thermal management in energy systems integrating metal hydride hydrogen store with a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) providing dissipated heat at temperatures between 400 and 600 °C. Recently, we have shown that graphite-modified composite of TiH2 and MgH2 prepared by high-energy reactive ball milling in hydrogen (HRBM), demonstrates a high reversible gravimetric H storage capacity exceeding 5 wt % H, fast hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics and excellent cycle stability. In present study, 0.9 MgH2 + 0.1 TiH2 +5 wt %C nanocomposite with a maximum hydrogen storage capacity of 6.3 wt% H was prepared by HRBM preceded by a short homogenizing pre-milling in inert gas. 300 g of the composite was loaded into a storage tank accommodating an air-heated stainless steel metal hydride (MH) container equipped with transversal internal (copper) and external (aluminium) fins. Tests of the tank were carried out in a temperature range from 150 °C (H2 absorption) to 370 °C (H2 desorption) and showed its ability to deliver up to 185 NL H2 corresponding to a reversible H storage capacity of the MH material of appr. 5 wt% H. No significant deterioration of the reversible H storage capacity was observed during 20 heating/cooling H2 discharge/charge cycles. It was found that H2 desorption performance can be tailored by selecting appropriate thermal management conditions and an optimal operational regime has been proposed.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1222132
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 16
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 15
social impact