4.7 Article

Hydride phase equilibria in V-Ti-Ni alloy membranes

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLOYS AND COMPOUNDS
Volume 622, Issue -, Pages 276-281

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jallcom.2014.10.081

Keywords

Hydrogen; Membrane; Alloy; Vanadium; Titanium

Funding

  1. Australian National Low Emissions Coal Research and Development (ANLEC RD)
  2. Australian Coal Association Low Emissions Technology Limited
  3. Australian Government through the Clean Energy Initiative
  4. Science-Industry Endowment Fund
  5. Australian Synchrotron, Victoria, Australia [AS141/PD/7553]

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Vanadium is highly permeable to hydrogen which makes it one of the leading alternatives to Pd alloys for hydrogen-selective alloy membrane applications, but it is prone to brittle failure through excessive hydrogen absorption and transitions between the BCC alpha and BCT beta phases. V-Ti-Ni alloys are a prospective class of alloy for hydrogen-selective membrane applications, comprising a highly-permeable vanadium solid solution and several interdendritic Ni-Ti compounds. These Ni-Ti compounds are thought to stabilise the alloy against brittle failure. This hypothesis was investigated through a systematic study of V70Ti15Ni15 by hydrogen absorption and X-ray diffraction under conditions relevant to membrane operation. Dissolved hydrogen concentration in the bulk alloy and component phases, phase identification, thermal and hydrogen-induced expansion, phase quantification and hydride phase transitions under a range of pressures and temperatures have been determined. The vanadium phase passes through three different phase fields (BCC, BCC + BCT, BCT + BCT) during cooling under H-2 from 400 to 30 degrees C. Dissolution of Ni and Ti into the vanadium phase increases the critical temperature for beta-hydride formation from <200 to >400 degrees C. Furthermore, the Ni-Ti phases also exhibit several phase transitions meaning their ability to stabilise the alloy is questionable. We conclude that this alloy is significantly inferior to V with respect to its stability when used as a hydrogen-selective membrane, but the hydride phase transitions suggest potential application for high-temperature hydrogen and thermal energy storage. (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier B. V.

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