JOURNAL ARTICLE

Hydrogen storage studies of Co, Fe, Fe3C nanoparticles encapsulated nitrogen doped carbon nanotubes

Abstract

Abstract The most crucial part of the hydrogen economy is the development of a hydrogen storage material which will be cost effective and its hydrogen storage capacity meets US DOE target. This study is an attempt to develop an efficient hydrogen storage material from a simple, one step synthesis technique. Herein, we synthesize metal nanoparticles encapsulated (M = Co, Fe, Fe 3 C) nitrogen doped carbon nanotubes (M/NCNT) for the efficient hydrogen adsorption within temperature range of 25°C to 100°C and at pressures 5 to 18 bar. The phase, morphology, surface area, and composition of the encapsulated metal nanoparticles NCNT were confirmed by different characterization techniques. Fe/NCNT is observed to have the highest hydrogen storage capacity of 3.3 wt% at room temperature, ~16 bar pressure, and the highest isosteric heat of adsorption ( Q st ) of 13 kJmol −1 , among all. B,N‐CNTs reported 0.35 wt% hydrogen storage capacity at ~16 bar H 2 equilibrium pressure and room temperature. The large surface area, defects produced on the CNT due to N doping as well as the presence of metal nanoparticles both inside, on the CNTs which results in the spillover mechanism for the dissociation of the hydrogen molecules into atoms and its diffusion through carbon layers within the CNT, are the factors that contribute to the enhancement of hydrogen storage capacity in M/NCNT.

Keywords:
Hydrogen storage Carbon nanotube Hydrogen Materials science Adsorption Chemical engineering Cryo-adsorption Hydrogen spillover Nanoparticle Metal Carbon fibers Nitrogen Nanotechnology Chemistry Composite material Metallurgy Organic chemistry Composite number

Metrics

12
Cited By
1.23
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
43
Refs
0.65
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Hydrogen Storage and Materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Supercapacitor Materials and Fabrication
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Nanomaterials for catalytic reactions
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry
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