Studies into the Storage of Hydrogen in Carbon Nanofibers: Proposal of a Possible Reaction Mechanism

Substantial levels of hydrogen, up to 6.5 wt %, have been stored in carbon nanofibers (CNFs) under conditions of 12 MPa pressure and ambient temperature. The magnitude of this result cannot be interpreted in terms of physisorption on the external surface alone. Kinetic studies indicate that a slow c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNano letters Vol. 2; no. 3; pp. 201 - 205
Main Authors Browning, Darren J, Gerrard, Mark L, Lakeman, J. Barry, Mellor, Ian M, Mortimer, Roger J, Turpin, Mark C
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 01.03.2002
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Summary:Substantial levels of hydrogen, up to 6.5 wt %, have been stored in carbon nanofibers (CNFs) under conditions of 12 MPa pressure and ambient temperature. The magnitude of this result cannot be interpreted in terms of physisorption on the external surface alone. Kinetic studies indicate that a slow chemisorption process is involved. The rate of uptake corresponds to that of hydrogen dissociation on graphite edge sites. Such a finding proposes a novel mechanism, offering a plausible explanation for these unusually high experimental observations. This involves the initial dissociation of hydrogen, believed to be catalyzed by carbon edge sites, which constitute the majority of the nanofiber surface, a property which is probably an important contributory factor toward their high hydrogen storage capacities.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/nl015576g