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Phys. Rev. B 76, 104108 (2007) [8 pages]

Stability analysis of doped materials for reversible hydrogen storage in destabilized metal hydrides

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Sudhakar V. Alapati1, J. Karl Johnson2,3, and David S. Sholl1,3,*
1Department of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA
2Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA
3National Energy Technology Laboratory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15236, USA

Received 30 May 2007; revised 13 August 2007; published 18 September 2007

Thermodynamic calculations with first principles density functional theory are carried out to estimate the free energies of various doped metal hydride systems. We consider doped destabilized hydride reactions of the form X1–xYxH2+2LiBH4→X1–xYxB2+2LiH+4H2, where X,Y=Mg, Sc, or Ti. We have evaluated the zero temperature enthalpies, without inclusion of zero point energies, for 18 different doped systems. Most systems are found to be unstable with respect to phase separation at 0 K. We have included configurational entropy to estimate the temperature at which the doped systems become stable. Most doped compounds are estimated to remain unstable with respect to phase segregation up to temperatures that are too high to be of practical interest. We have computed the phonon density of states for the X=Sc, Y=Ti system and find that this system is stable with respect to phase segregation at T>435 K. We have computed the van’t Hoff plot for Sc7H16Ti+16LiBH4→Sc7B16Ti+16LiH+32H2 and compared this to the undoped reaction. Doping increases the vapor pressure at a given temperature, but only by a factor of 2–4.

© 2007 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.76.104108
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.76.104108
PACS:
64.75.+g, 61.72.−y, 61.66.Fn, 84.60.Ve

*Corresponding author. sholl@andrew.cmu.edu