A unified descriptor framework for hydrogen storage capacity and equilibrium pressure in interstitial hydrides

Abstract

Hydrogen is a promising energy carrier, yet its practical deployment is limited by the lack of storage materials that simultaneously achieve high storage capacity (w) and practical equilibrium pressure at room temperature (P_(eq,RT)). Interstitial metal hydrides offer fast kinetics and favorable thermodynamics (high P_(eq,RT)) but suffer from intrinsically low w. Here, we establish a physically interpretable, data-driven framework to uncover descriptor-property relationships in interstitial hydrides using a curated database of pressure-composition-temperature measurements (Digital Hydrogen Platform, DigHyd) and white-box symbolic regression. Strikingly, the analysis reveals a clear separation of governing mechanisms, in which w is governed by geometric and lattice conditions, captured by the average atomic radius (⟨r_M ⟩) and average thermal conductivity (⟨κ⟩), with an optimal regime of 〈r_M 〉 ~ 1.47 Å and relatively low ⟨κ⟩. In contrast, P_(eq,RT) is governed by elastic properties, captured by the average shear modulus (⟨G⟩) and average Poisson’s ratio (⟨ν⟩), reflecting the role of lattice rigidity and mechanical compliance. These relationships are translated into compositional optimization pathways that follow the descriptor trends above, enabling the design of candidate materials with enhanced w under practical equilibrium conditions (P_(eq,RT) ~ 0.1 MPa). This work establishes a general, interpretable strategy for physics-informed design of energy materials systems.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
14 Apr 2026
Accepted
24 May 2026
First published
25 May 2026
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY license

Chem. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

A unified descriptor framework for hydrogen storage capacity and equilibrium pressure in interstitial hydrides

S. Jang, D. Zhang, X. Jia, H. B. Tran, L. Zhang, R. Sato, Y. Hashimoto, Y. Ohashi, T. Sato, K. Konno, S. Orimo and H. Li, Chem. Sci., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6SC03089K

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