Publication | Closed Access
Chemical−Clathrate Hybrid Hydrogen Storage: Storage in Both Guest and Host
69
Citations
20
References
2008
Year
Energy Storage MaterialsMaterials ScienceChemical EngineeringHydrogen Storage ProblemStorage SystemsEngineeringHydrogen TransitionHydrogen Energy TechnologyHydrogen TransportEnergy StoragePhysical ChemistryHydrogen UtilizationHydrogenChemistryHost HqHydrogen GenerationBiophysics
Hydrogen storage from two independent sources of the same material represents a novel approach to the hydrogen storage problem, yielding storage capacities greater than either of the individual constituents. Here we report a novel hydrogen storage scheme in which recoverable hydrogen is stored molecularly within clathrate cavities as well as chemically in the clathrate host material. X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopic measurements confirm the formation of beta-hydroquinone (beta-HQ) clathrate with molecular hydrogen. Hydrogen within the beta-HQ clathrate vibrates at considerably lower frequency than hydrogen in the free gaseous phase and rotates nondegenerately with splitting comparable to the rotational constant. Compared with water-based clathrate hydrate phases, the beta-HQ+H2 clathrate shows remarkable stability over a range of p-T conditions. Subsequent to clathrate decomposition, the host HQ was used to directly power a PEM fuel cell. With one H2 molecule per cavity, 0.61 wt % hydrogen may be stored in the beta-HQ clathrate cavities. When this amount is combined with complete dehydrogenation of the host hydroxyl hydrogens, the maximum hydrogen storage capacity increases nearly 300% to 2.43 wt %.
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