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Hydrogen storage capacity improvement of...
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Hydrogen storage capacity improvement of nanostructured materials

Abstract

Safe, lightweight, and cost-effective materials are required to practically store hydrogen for use in portable fuel cell applications. Compressed hydrogen and on-board hydrocarbon reforming present certain advantages, but their limitations must ultimately render them insufficient. Storage in hydrides and adsorption systems show promise in models and experimentation, but a practical medium remains unavailable. To study hydrogen storage properties a new volumetric testing apparatus was designed and constructed. Adsorption conditions are evaluated up to pressures exceeding 250 bar and a broad range of temperatures. RF sputtering was used to introduce metals to carbon nanotubes with the aim to enhance hydrogen storage. Here we show a significant improvement in the gravimetric storage density over that of as-prepared single-wall nanotube samples that may be due to the unique interface introduced.

Authors

Lawrence J; Xu G

Volume

704

Pagination

pp. 219-224

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

Conference proceedings

Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings

ISSN

0272-9172

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