4.8 Article

Direct Evidence for Solid-like Hydrogen in a Nanoporous Carbon Hydrogen Storage Material at Supercritical Temperatures

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages 8249-8254

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b02623

Keywords

nanoporous materials; hydrogen storage; carbon; neutron scattering

Funding

  1. EPSRC Development Fund grant
  2. University of Bath Prize Research Fellowship
  3. EPSRC DTC in Sustainable Chemical Technologies at Bath (JES) [EP/K021109/1]
  4. EPSRC SUPERGEN (UK-SHEC) [EP/J016454/1]
  5. H<INF>2</INF>FC [EP/E040071/1]
  6. Chris Goodway
  7. Mark Kibble (STFC)
  8. STFC [RB1210041, RB1410602]
  9. Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, US Department of Energy (DoE) [DE-ACO5000R22725]
  10. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/E040071/1, EP/J016454/1, EP/L018365/1, EP/K021109/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  11. EPSRC [EP/J016454/1, EP/L018365/1, EP/E040071/1, EP/K021109/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Here we report direct physical evidence that confinement of molecular hydrogen (H-2) in an optimized nanoporous carbon results in accumulation of hydrogen with characteristics commensurate with solid H2 at temperatures up to 67 K above the liquid vapor critical temperature of bulk H2. This extreme densification is attributed to confinement of 112 molecules in the optimally sized micropores, and occurs at pressures as low as 0.02 MPa. The quantities of contained, solid-like H2 increased with pressure and were directly evaluated using in situ inelastic neutron scattering and confirmed by analysis of gas sorption isotherms. The demonstration of the existence of solid-like H2 challenges the existing assumption that supercritical hydrogen confined in nanopores has an upper limit of liquid H2 density. Thus, this insight offers opportunities for the development of more accurate models for the evaluation and design of nanoporous materials for high capacity adsorptive hydrogen storage.

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