Enhanced hydrogenation kinetics of magnesium diboride through carbon substitution into the boride layers
Abstract
It was recently found that hydrogenation of MgB2 undergoes significant kinetic enhancement upon modification with graphene additives, a significant step towards its development as a practical hydrogen storage material. In order to gain a fundamental understanding of the kinetic activation of the modified material, it has been subjected to (S)TEM, synchrotron X-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction analyses, and high pressure hydrogenation studies. (S)TEM analyses of mechanically milled MgB2/graphene shows no reduction in grain size, and thus the enhanced kinetics cannot be attributed to increased surface area. The lattice parameters obtained from Rietveld refinements of synchrotron X-ray diffraction data for the directly synthesized Mg1+x/2B2−xCx and undoped MgB2 show that the a lattice parameter (a = 3.05915(8) Å) is about 0.8% smaller than that of the undoped material (a = 3.08158(5) but the c lattice parameter is invariant. Refinements of powder neutron diffraction show a similar reduction of the a parameter in both the materials prepared by ball-milling and direct synthesis (∼3.0476(7) Å) compared to the undoped sample (a = 3.0758(2)) while the c lattice parameters remain constant. The finding of a significant increase in the c/a ratio for these materials indicates that the mechanical milling of MgB2 with graphene represents an alternative method to prepare Mg1+x/2B2−xCx. This conclusion is supported by the finding that both materials undergo major conversion to Mg(BH4)2 upon hydrogenation under identical conditions under which the mechanically milled material was found to undergo hydrogenation, establishing a correlation between carbon substitution into the bulk MgB2 lattice and enhanced hydrogenation kinetics.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry A HOT Papers

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