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Characterization of hydrogen storage materials

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Development phase gm kg samples. more detailed properties data. material characterization ... standard testing and certification program specifically aimed at ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Characterization of hydrogen storage materials


1
Characterization of hydrogen storage materials
  • Oak Ridge National Laboratories
  • Hydrogen Storage Workshop
  • May 7 8, 2003
  • George Thomas, Consultant
  • Sandia National Laboratories

2
Development efforts for more efficient hydrogen
storage materials are increasing
  • It will become increasingly important to employ
    consistent material characterization methods
  • in order to speed the development process
  • and make effective use of limited resources
  • Inaccurate results take disproportionate amount
    of resources and waste time
  • its more difficult to disprove erroneous data
    than it is to generate accurate data
  • Development is commercially driven
  • timely, consistent and accurate material
    information is needed

3
Development efforts for more efficient hydrogen
storage materials are increasing
  • It will become increasingly important to employ
    consistent material characterization methods
  • in order to speed the development process
  • and make effective use of limited resources
  • Inaccurate results take disproportionate amount
    of resources and waste time
  • its more difficult to disprove erroneous data
    than it is to generate accurate data
  • Development is commercially driven
  • timely, consistent and accurate material
    information is needed

4
Development efforts for more efficient hydrogen
storage materials are increasing
  • It will become increasingly important to employ
    consistent material characterization methods
  • in order to speed the development process
  • and make effective use of limited resources
  • Inaccurate results take disproportionate amount
    of resources and waste time
  • its more difficult to disprove erroneous data
    than it is to generate accurate data
  • Development is commercially driven
  • timely, consistent and accurate material
    information is needed

5
Development timeline
6
Phases in the development timeline
  • Research phase mg gm samples
  • achieve reproducibility
  • understand mechanisms
  • Development phase gm kg samples
  • more detailed properties data
  • material characterization
  • System engineering phase gt kg samples
  • operational characterization

7
Research phase
  • Three types of analyses
  • hydrogen properties measurements
  • material characterization
  • mechanistic studies
  • Correlation of hydrogen properties with
  • material synthesis method
  • material pretreatment
  • material morphology and structure
  • material chemistry

8
Hydrogen properties
  • hydrogen uptake and hydrogen release
  • quantitative measurements
  • thermodynamic properties vs. temperature
  • kinetic behavior vs temperature
  • preferred measurement techniques
  • volumetric (for gram samples)
  • gravimetric (for milligram samples)
  • isothermal for capacity and thermodynamics
  • thermal ramp (TPD) for scoping materials
  • mass spec. (e.g., RGA) for gas species

9
Material characterization
  • material structure
  • microscopy
  • XRD
  • neutron diffraction
  • composition
  • mechanistic studies
  • e.g., NMR, ESR, XPS, AES, Raman, . . .
  • neutron scattering
  • in-situ experiments

10
Development phase
  • Determine material properties which will enable
    the fabrication of larger quantities and the
    design and fabrication of storage systems
  • hydrogen properties
  • determine pressure-composition-temperature
    relationship (PCT measurements) for uptake and
    release.
  • true hydrogen capacity
  • H2 release/total weight of material
  • (includes dopants, impurities, other dead
    weight)
  • kinetic behavior

11
Example NaAlH4 doping affects kinetics
(G. Sandrock, K. J. Gross, G. Thomas, JAC 339
(2002) 299)
  • Initial kinetics exhibit Arrhenius behavior
  • different activiation energy in doped material
  • activation energy constant for 2 mol and greater
    doping
  • faster kinetics with higher doping levels

12
Development phase also provides engineering data
on materials
  • Material properties
  • particle size, shape
  • volume change with absorption/desorption
  • packing density
  • cycling behavior
  • effects of input gas stream impurities on
    capacity, kinetics.
  • output gas stream purity
  • Other engineering properties
  • thermal conductivity of packed bed
  • safety issues related to environmental exposure
  • e.g., air, water, shock, temperature
  • materials compatibility

13
Engineering Properties
  • Thermal conductivity
  • similar to IM hydrides
  • cycling
  • stable to 100 cycles
  • material compatibility
  • no issues with Al, SS
  • safety
  • autothermal behavior

14
FreedomCAR system targets based on performance
requirements
2005 2010 2015
  • specific energy (MJ/kg) 5.4 7.2 TBD weight
    percent hydrogen 4.5 6.0
  • energy density (MJ/liter) 4.3 5.4
  • system cost (/kg system) 9 6
  • operating temperature (C) -20/50
  • cycle life 500 1000
  • flow rate (g/sec) 3 4
  • delivery pressure (bar) 2.5 2.5
  • transient response (sec) 0.5 0.5
  • refueling rate (kg H2/min) 0.5 1.5
  • loss, permeation, leakage, toxicity, safety

15
System engineering phasemeasurements on storage
systems
  • hydrogen properties
  • usable capacity at specified delivery pressure
  • steady state delivery flow rate
  • fill rate/time
  • partial list of system properties
  • total weight and volume
  • transient response
  • cold start temperature and time
  • operational temperature range
  • coolant/heating requirements
  • overall efficiency

16
In all development phases, there are many
potential sources of inconsistent results
  • small sample sizes (mg)
  • lack of consistent pre-treatment of materials
  • impurities
  • multiple phases present
  • sample characterization
  • lack of standardized measurement techniques
  • gravimetric, volumetric, flow
  • hydrogen dosing or loading conditions
  • thermal ramp, isothermal
  • calibration
  • lack of release gas stream analysis (speciation)

17
Example published values for carbon
capacitiesM. Heben, NREL
gt10 wt
lt 1 wt
18
This has led to the establishment of an
independent testing facility by DOE
  • Southwest Research Institute
  • Standardized Testing Program for Emergent
    Chemical Hydride and Carbon Storage Technologies
  • Objectives
  • Develop and operate a standard testing and
    certification program specifically aimed at
    assessing the performance, safety and life cycle
    of emergent chemical hydride and carbon
    adsorption/desorption hydrogen storage systems.
  • Work with industry and the U.S. government to
    develop an accepted set of performance and safety
    evaluation standards.
  • Contacts
  • R. A. Page
  • M. A. Miller

19
SwRI standardized testing program
  • Project structure not finalized, but the
    following components have been identified
  • Intrinsic material properties
  • high pressure gravimetric analyzer
  • milligram to gram samples
  • mass spec. desorption speciation
  • Hydride bed systems
  • Sieverts apparatus
  • gt35 atm operating pressures
  • gtkg sample sizes
  • Supporting materials characterization

20
Summary
  • The SwRI independent testing facility should
    contribute to improved reliability and
    consistency of storage material data
  • There is also a need for better
  • coordination
  • collaboration
  • information exchange
  • between research organizations
  • Such interactions could be established through
  • working groups
  • (example are the alanate and carbon W.G.s)
  • virtual centers

21
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