Amorphous alloys for hydrogen storage
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-04-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.192
CiteScore: 11.8
Impact factor: 6.3
ISSN: 09258388, 18734669
Materials Chemistry
Metals and Alloys
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanics of Materials
Abstract
Metal hydrides are promising materials for solid-state hydrogen storage, however, their gravimetric hydrogen storage density is generally low. In addition, they may also exhibit poor activity, sluggish de/hydrogenation kinetics and high thermodynamic stability, in particular for metal hydrides with high storage capacity. Because of the long-range disordered atomic structure, the amorphous structure, showing a wider interstitial configuration diversity, can provide hydrogen with more types of occupation sites. Such unique property leads to much larger hydrogen storage capacity, faster de/hydrogenation kinetics, local thermodynamic destabilization and even destruction resistance. Therefore, making use of amorphous structure is one of the attractive strategies for promoting the performance of metal hydrides. To develop amorphous hydrogen storage alloys, composition design is the first issue, and two main factors should be considered. One is the glass forming ability of alloys and the other is hydrogen storage ability of the alloys. Comparing with the crystalline counterparts, the amorphous hydrogen storage alloys exhibit some unique features: (1) the non-Arrhenius hydrogen diffusion; (2) the deviation from the Sieverts’ law; (3) protean hydrogen-induced phase separation/crystallization; (4) plateau-free pressure-composition-isothermal curve; (5) excessed storage capacity; etc. Till now, the developed hydrogen storage amorphous alloys are mainly Ti-based, Zr-based and Mg-based alloys. Some amorphous alloys do show attractive performance. In particular, Mg-based amorphous alloys have been investigated extensively in recent years. The hydrogen storage capacity in Mg-based amorphous alloys can be readily higher than 3.0 wt%-H, and with addition of other elements, one can also obtain reasonable de/hydrogenation rate and temperature during electrochemical or gaseous process. Though the de/hydrogenation capacity and kinetics of the amorphous alloys can be much better than the crystalline counterparts, there are still great challenges, such as amorphous structure stability, long-cycle reversible de/hydrogenation and irreversible hydrogen-induced amorphous phase transformation. With further exploration of alloy composition and material processing, there are great chances in using hydrogen storage amorphous alloys as energy storage material.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Top-30
Journals
|
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
|
|
|
Journal of Alloys and Compounds
13 publications, 20%
|
|
|
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
8 publications, 12.31%
|
|
|
Journal of Energy Storage
3 publications, 4.62%
|
|
|
Chemical Engineering Journal
2 publications, 3.08%
|
|
|
Advanced Functional Materials
2 publications, 3.08%
|
|
|
Metals
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Energies
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Materials Today: Proceedings
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Gas Science and Engineering
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Industrial Crops and Products
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Brazilian Journal of Physics
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Surface and Coatings Technology
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Heliyon
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Rare Metals
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
ChemEngineering
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Batteries
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Progress in Materials Science
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Sustainable Energy and Fuels
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Materials
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Interdisciplinary Materials
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Journal of Power Sources
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Inorganics
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Intermetallics
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Acta Materialia
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Nanoscale
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
ACS Nano
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
Chemical Physics Impact
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
|
Publishers
|
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
|
|
|
Elsevier
45 publications, 69.23%
|
|
|
MDPI
8 publications, 12.31%
|
|
|
Wiley
4 publications, 6.15%
|
|
|
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
3 publications, 4.62%
|
|
|
IOP Publishing
2 publications, 3.08%
|
|
|
Springer Nature
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
American Chemical Society (ACS)
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
American Physical Society (APS)
1 publication, 1.54%
|
|
|
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
|
- We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
- Statistics recalculated weekly.
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Metrics
65
Total citations:
65
Citations from 2024:
55
(84.62%)
Cite this
GOST |
RIS |
BibTex
Cite this
GOST
Copy
Huang L. et al. Amorphous alloys for hydrogen storage // Journal of Alloys and Compounds. 2023. Vol. 941. p. 168945.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
Copy
Huang L., Lin H., Wang H., Ouyang L., Zhu M. Amorphous alloys for hydrogen storage // Journal of Alloys and Compounds. 2023. Vol. 941. p. 168945.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.jallcom.2023.168945
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jallcom.2023.168945
TI - Amorphous alloys for hydrogen storage
T2 - Journal of Alloys and Compounds
AU - Huang, Liang
AU - Lin, Huaijun
AU - Wang, H.
AU - Ouyang, Liuzhang
AU - Zhu, Min
PY - 2023
DA - 2023/04/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 168945
VL - 941
SN - 0925-8388
SN - 1873-4669
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2023_Huang,
author = {Liang Huang and Huaijun Lin and H. Wang and Liuzhang Ouyang and Min Zhu},
title = {Amorphous alloys for hydrogen storage},
journal = {Journal of Alloys and Compounds},
year = {2023},
volume = {941},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {apr},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jallcom.2023.168945},
pages = {168945},
doi = {10.1016/j.jallcom.2023.168945}
}