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  4. Nanoscale Mg-B via Surfactant Ball Milling of MgB<inf>2</inf>: Morphology, Composition, and Improved Hydrogen Storage Properties
 
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Nanoscale Mg-B via Surfactant Ball Milling of MgB<inf>2</inf>: Morphology, Composition, and Improved Hydrogen Storage Properties

Journal
Journal of Physical Chemistry C
ISSN
19327447
Date Issued
2020-10-01
Author(s)
Liu, Y. S.
Ray, K. G.
Jørgensen, M.
Mattox, T. M.
Cowgill, D. F.
Eshelman, H. V.
Sawvel, A. M.
Snider, J. L.
York, W.
Wijeratne, P.
Pham, A. L.
Gunda, H.
Li, S.
Heo, T. W.
Kang, S.
Jensen, T. R.
Stavila, V.
Wood, B. C.
Klebanoff, L. E.
DOI
10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c05142
Abstract
Metal borides have attracted the attention of researchers due to their useful physical properties and unique ability to form high hydrogen-capacity metal borohydrides. We demonstrate improved hydrogen storage properties of a nanoscale Mg-B material made by surfactant ball milling MgB2 in a mixture of heptane, oleic acid, and oleylamine. Transmission electron microscopy data show that Mg-B nanoplatelets are produced with sizes ranging from 5 to 50 nm, which agglomerate upon ethanol washing to produce an agglomerated nanoscale Mg-B material of micron-sized particles with some surfactant still remaining. X-ray diffraction measurements reveal a two-component material where 32% of the solid is a strained crystalline solid maintaining the hexagonal structure with the remainder being amorphous. Fourier transform infrared shows that the oleate binds in a "bridge-bonding"fashion preferentially to magnesium rather than boron, which is confirmed by density functional theory calculations. The Mg-B nanoscale material is deficient in boron relative to bulk MgB2 with a Mg-B ratio of ∼1:0.75. The nanoscale MgB0.75 material has a disrupted B-B ring network as indicated by X-ray absorption measurements. Hydrogenation experiments at 700 bar and 280 °C show that it partially hydrogenates at temperatures 100 °C below the threshold for bulk MgB2 hydrogenation. In addition, upon heating to 200 °C, the H-H bond-breaking ability increases ∼10-fold according to hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments due to desorption of oleate at the surface. This behavior would make the nanoscale Mg-B material useful as an additive where rapid H-H bond breaking is needed.
Volume
124
Publication link
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1670751
Sherpa Url
https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/7799
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