Defying Thermodynamics: Stabilization of Alane Within Covalent Triazine Frameworks for Reversible Hydrogen Storage.
Vitalie StavilaSichi LiChaochao DunMaxwell A T MarpleHarris E MasonJonathan L SniderJoseph E ReynoldsFarid El GabalyJoshua D SugarCatalin D SpataruXiaowang ZhouBrennan DizdarEric H MajzoubRuchira ChatterjeeJunko YanoHendrik SchlombergBettina V LotschJeffrey J UrbanBrandon C WoodMark D AllendorfPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
The highly unfavorable thermodynamics of direct aluminum hydrogenation can be overcome by stabilizing alane within a nanoporous bipyridine-functionalized covalent triazine framework (AlH3 @CTF-bipyridine). This material and the counterpart AlH3 @CTF-biphenyl rapidly desorb H2 between 95 and 154 °C, with desorption complete at 250 °C. Sieverts measurements, 27 Al MAS NMR and 27 Al{1 H} REDOR experiments, and computational spectroscopy reveal that AlH3 @CTF-bipyridine dehydrogenation is reversible at 60 °C under 700 bar hydrogen, >10 times lower pressure than that required to hydrogenate bulk aluminum. DFT calculations and EPR measurements support an unconventional mechanism whereby strong AlH3 binding to bipyridine results in single-electron transfer to form AlH2 (AlH3 )n clusters. The resulting size-dependent charge redistribution alters the dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation thermochemistry, suggesting a novel strategy to enable reversibility in high-capacity metal hydrides.