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Boosting the Dehydrogenation Properties of LiAlH 4 by Addition of TiSiO 4 .

Nurul Yasmeen YusnizamNurul Amirah AliNoratiqah SazeleeMohammad Ismail
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Given its significant gravimetric hydrogen capacity advantage, lithium alanate (LiAlH 4 ) is regarded as a suitable material for solid-state hydrogen storage. Nevertheless, its outrageous decomposition temperature and slow sorption kinetics hinder its application as a solid-state hydrogen storage material. This research's objective is to investigate how the addition of titanium silicate (TiSiO 4 ) altered the dehydrogenation behavior of LiAlH 4 . The LiAlH 4 -10 wt% TiSiO 4 composite dehydrogenation temperatures were lowered to 92 °C (first-step reaction) and 128 °C (second-step reaction). According to dehydrogenation kinetic analysis, the TiSiO 4 -added LiAlH 4 composite was able to liberate more hydrogen (about 6.0 wt%) than the undoped LiAlH 4 composite (less than 1.0 wt%) at 90 °C for 2 h. After the addition of TiSiO 4 , the activation energies for hydrogen to liberate from LiAlH 4 were lowered. Based on the Kissinger equation, the activation energies for hydrogen liberation for the two-step dehydrogenation of post-milled LiAlH 4 were 103 and 115 kJ/mol, respectively. After milling LiAlH 4 with 10 wt% TiSiO 4 , the activation energies were reduced to 68 and 77 kJ/mol, respectively. Additionally, the scanning electron microscopy images demonstrated that the LiAlH 4 particles shrank and barely aggregated when 10 wt% of TiSiO 4 was added. According to the X-ray diffraction results, TiSiO 4 had a significant effect by lowering the decomposition temperature and increasing the rate of dehydrogenation of LiAlH 4 via the new active species of AlTi and Si-containing that formed during the heating process.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • electron microscopy
  • density functional theory
  • visible light
  • magnetic resonance
  • deep learning
  • convolutional neural network
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment