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Research Areas & Activities
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C-H Bonds in Carbon Nanotubes as an Energy Carrier
Direct Solar Biohydrogen
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Nanomaterials Engineering for Hydrogen Storage
Start Date: January 2004 Status: Completed PDF version Investigators Kyeongjae (KJ) Cho, Mechanical Engineering;
Bruce Clemens, Materials Science and Engineering;
Hongjie Dai, Chemistry;
Anders Nilsson, Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, Stanford University The objective of this project is to develop optimized nanocomposite materials for high-density H2 reversible storage applications. Specifically, carbon nanotube-catalyst nanoparticle composite materials with well-controlled nanotube size will be developed, that are optimized to satisfy the target fundamental characteristics for hydrogen storage. A systematic design and fabrication process will be followed that will permit not only controlled growth of carbon nanotubes but also incorporation of nanoparticles to decorate the nanotubes to catalyze H2 adsorption and desorption processes. BackgroundNanomaterials have diverse tunable physical properties as a function of their size and shape due to strong quantum confinement effects and large surface/volume ratios. A single wall carbon nanotube (SWCNT) has the same structure as a roll of a single graphene sheet and has nanometer sized diameters ranging from 4 to over 100 Å. Due to their large surface areas with relatively small mass, SWCNTs have been considered as potential materials for high capacity hydrogen storage. Theoretically, they can store hydrogen up to 7.7 wt%, as every carbon atom in SWCNTs chemisorbs one hydrogen atom. In addition, the subsequent physisorption of hydrogen on the surfaces of hydrogenated SWCNTs can increase the capacity of hydrogen storage even further. In spite of the strong potential of SWCNTs, current experimental findings are not very promising mainly due to the lack of control in preparing SWCNTs as a hydrogen storage medium. It has recently been shown that the H-CNT interaction energy is a very sensitive function of the nanotube size, and a sample of a wide range of CNT sizes would have only a small fraction of the CNT surface suitable for hydrogen storage. There is currently much skepticism on carbon nanotube hydrogen storage due to early mistakes in experimental publications and therefore a rational basis for high capacity hydrogen storage materials is being developed through the systematic nano-materials research undertaken in this effort.
Figure 1: Flow diagram of the project Approach The framework of nanomaterial design, fabrication and
characterization illustrated in Figure 1 will be used to optimize the
catalyzed nanotube for hydrogen storage. A systematic search process in
material parameter space (particle composition and size) will be
applied. The materials design will be implemented by fabrication and
characterization of the nanocomposite materials for their reversible
hydrogen storage capacity. The four main thrusts of this approach are
discussed below:
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