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Stabilized open metal sites in bimetallic metal-organic framework catalysts for hydrogen production from alcohols

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

Allendorf, Mark; Snider, Jonathan L.; Su, Ji; Verma, Pragya; El Gabaly, Farid; Sugar, Joshua D.; Chen, Luning; Chames, Jeffery M.; Talin, Albert A.; Dun, Chaochao; Urban, Jeffrey J.; Stavila, Vitalie; Prendergast, David; Somorjai, Gabor A.

Liquid organic hydrogen carriers such as alcohols and polyols are a high-capacity means of transporting and reversibly storing hydrogen that demands effective catalysts to drive the (de)hydrogenation reactions under mild conditions. We employed a combined theory/experiment approach to develop MOF-74 catalysts for alcohol dehydrogenation and examine the performance of the open metal sites (OMS), which have properties analogous to the active sites in high-performance single-site catalysts and homogeneous catalysts. Methanol dehydrogenation was used as a model reaction system for assessing the performance of five monometallic M-MOF-74 variants (M = Co, Cu, Mg, Mn, Ni). Co-MOF-74 and Ni-MOF-74 give the highest H2 productivity. However, Ni-MOF-74 is unstable under reaction conditions and forms metallic nickel particles. To improve catalyst activity and stability, bimetallic (NixMg1-x)-MOF-74 catalysts were developed that stabilize the Ni OMS and promote the dehydrogenation reaction. An optimal composition exists at (Ni0.32Mg0.68)-MOF-74 that gives the greatest H2 productivity, up to 203 mL gcat-1 min-1 at 300 °C, and maintains 100% selectivity to CO and H2 between 225-275 °C. The optimized catalyst is also active for the dehydrogenation of other alcohols. DFT calculations reveal that synergistic interactions between the open metal site and the organic linker lead to lower reaction barriers in the MOF catalysts compared to the open metal site alone. This work expands the suite of hydrogen-related reactions catalyzed by MOF-74 which includes recent work on hydroformulation and our earlier reports of aryl-ether hydrogenolysis. Moreover, it highlights the use of bimetallic frameworks as an effective strategy for stabilizing a high density of catalytically active open metal sites. This journal is

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Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities in the Synthesis, Characterization, and Application of Metal-Boride-Derived Two-Dimensional Nanostructures

ACS Materials Letters

Sharma, Peter A.; Stavila, Vitalie; Klebanoff, Leonard E.

Two-dimensional (2D) metal-boride-derived nanostructures have been a focus of intense research for the past decade, with an emphasis on new synthetic approaches, as well as on the exploration of possible applications in next-generation advanced materials and devices. Their unusual mechanical, electronic, optical, and chemical properties, arising from low dimensionality, present a new paradigm to the science of metal borides that has traditionally focused on their bulk properties. This Perspective discusses the current state of research on metal-boride-derived 2D nanostructures, highlights challenges that must be overcome, and identifies future opportunities to fully utilize their potential.

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Covalent Graphene-MOF Hybrids for High-Performance Asymmetric Supercapacitors

Advanced Materials

Stavila, Vitalie

In this work, the covalent attachment of an amine functionalized metal-organic framework (UiO-66-NH2 = Zr6O4(OH)4(bdc-NH2)6; bdc-NH2 = 2-amino-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) (UiO-Universitetet i Oslo) to the basal-plane of carboxylate functionalized graphene (graphene acid = GA) via amide bonds is reported. The resultant GA@UiO-66-NH2 hybrid displayed a large specific surface area, hierarchical pores and an interconnected conductive network. The electrochemical characterizations demonstrated that the hybrid GA@UiO-66-NH2 acts as an effective charge storing material with a capacitance of up to 651 F g−1, significantly higher than traditional graphene-based materials. The results suggest that the amide linkage plays a key role in the formation of a π-conjugated structure, which facilitates charge transfer and consequently offers good capacitance and cycling stability. Furthermore, to realize the practical feasibility, an asymmetric supercapacitor using a GA@UiO-66-NH2 positive electrode with Ti3C2TX MXene as the opposing electrode has been constructed. The cell is able to deliver a power density of up to 16 kW kg−1 and an energy density of up to 73 Wh kg−1, which are comparable to several commercial devices such as Pb-acid and Ni/MH batteries. Under an intermediate level of loading, the device retained 88% of its initial capacitance after 10 000 cycles.

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Design principles for the ultimate gas deliverable capacity material: Nonporous to porous deformations without volume change

Molecular Systems Design and Engineering

Witman, Matthew D.; Ling, Sanliang; Stavila, Vitalie; Wijeratne, Pavithra; Furukawa, Hiroyasu; Allendorf, Mark

Understanding the fundamental limits of gas deliverable capacity in porous materials is of critical importance as it informs whether technical targets (e.g., for on-board vehicular storage) are feasible. High-throughput screening studies of rigid materials, for example, have shown they are not able to achieve the original ARPA-E methane storage targets, yet an interesting question remains: what is the upper limit of deliverable capacity in flexible materials? In this work we develop a statistical adsorption model that specifically probes the limit of deliverable capacity in intrinsically flexible materials. The resulting adsorption thermodynamics indicate that a perfectly designed, intrinsically flexible nanoporous material could achieve higher methane deliverable capacity than the best benchmark systems known to date with little to no total volume change. Density functional theory and grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations identify a known metal-organic framework (MOF) that validates key features of the model. Therefore, this work (1) motivates a continued, extensive effort to rationally design a porous material analogous to the adsorption model and (2) calls for continued discovery of additional high deliverable capacity materials that remain hidden from rigid structure screening studies due to nominal non-porosity.

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On the fatigue crack growth behavior of Ti–10V–2Fe–3Al in gaseous hydrogen

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

Harris, Zachary D.; Ronevich, Joseph; Stavila, Vitalie; Somerday, Brian P.

The fatigue crack growth behavior of Ti–10V–2Fe–3Al in gaseous hydrogen (H2) was assessed through comparative experiments conducted in laboratory air and 8.3 MPa H2. The measured fatigue crack growth rate (da/dN) versus applied stress intensity factor range (ΔK) relationships and observed fracture morphologies for laboratory air and H2 were comparable up to ΔK ≈ 6.9 MPa√m, when tested at a load ratio of 0.1 and frequency of 10 Hz. At higher ΔK values, significant crack deflection and subsequent catastrophic failure occurred in the specimen tested in H2. This degradation was not observed in a specimen pre-exposed to 8.3 MPa H2 for 96 h and then immediately tested in laboratory air. X-ray diffraction of the failed H2-tested specimen revealed that the material remnants were predominantly composed of TiH2, suggesting that hydride formation was the catalyst for catastrophic failure in H2. The mechanistic implications of these results and their impact on current material compatibility assessments for Ti alloys in hydrogen service are then discussed.

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Nanoscale Mg-B via Surfactant Ball Milling of MgB2: Morphology, Composition, and Improved Hydrogen Storage Properties

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Liu, Y.S.; Ray, K.G.; Jorgensen, M.; Klebanoff, L.E.; 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, Vitalie; Wood, B.C.

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.

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Nanoconfinement of Molecular Magnesium Borohydride Captured in a Bipyridine-Functionalized Metal-Organic Framework

ACS Nano

Schneemann, Andreas; Wan, Liwen F.; Lipton, Andrew S.; Liu, Yi S.; Snider, Jonathan; Baker, Alexander A.; Sugar, Joshua D.; Spataru, Catalin D.; Guo, Jinghua; Autrey, Tom S.; Jorgensen, Mathias; Jensen, Torben R.; Wood, Brandon C.; Allendorf, Mark; Stavila, Vitalie

The lower limit of metal hydride nanoconfinement is demonstrated through the coordination of a molecular hydride species to binding sites inside the pores of a metal-organic framework (MOF). Magnesium borohydride, which has a high hydrogen capacity, is incorporated into the pores of UiO-67bpy (Zr6O4(OH)4(bpydc)6 with bpydc2- = 2,2′-bipyridine-5,5′-dicarboxylate) by solvent impregnation. The MOF retained its long-range order, and transmission electron microscopy and elemental mapping confirmed the retention of the crystal morphology and revealed a homogeneous distribution of the hydride within the MOF host. Notably, the B-, N-, and Mg-edge XAS data confirm the coordination of Mg(II) to the N atoms of the chelating bipyridine groups. In situ 11B MAS NMR studies helped elucidate the reaction mechanism and revealed that complete hydrogen release from Mg(BH4)2 occurs as low as 200 °C. Sieverts and thermogravimetric measurements indicate an increase in the rate of hydrogen release, with the onset of hydrogen desorption as low as 120 °C, which is approximately 150 °C lower than that of the bulk material. Furthermore, density functional theory calculations support the improved dehydrogenation properties and confirm the drastically lower activation energy for B-H bond dissociation.

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Structural and dynamical properties of potassium dodecahydro-monocarba-closo-dodecaborate: KCB11H12

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Stavila, Vitalie

MCB11H12 (M: Li, Na) dodecahydro-monocarba-closo-dodecaborate salt compounds are known to have stellar superionic Li+ and Na+ conductivities in their high-temperature disordered phases, making them potentially appealing electrolytes in all-solid-state batteries. Nonetheless, it is of keen interest to search for other related materials with similar conductivities while at the same time exhibiting even lower (more device-relevant) disordering temperatures, a key challenge for this class of materials. With this in mind, the unknown structural and dynamical properties of the heavier KCB11H12 congener were investigated in detail by X-ray powder diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, neutron vibrational spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance, quasielastic neutron scattering, and AC impedance measurements. This salt indeed undergoes an entropy-driven, reversible, order-disorder transformation and with a lower onset temperature (348 K upon heating and 340 K upon cooling) in comparison to the lighter LiCB11H12 and NaCB11H12 analogues. The K+ cations in both the low-T ordered monoclinic (P21/c) and high-T disordered cubic (Fm3¯ m) structures occupy octahedral interstices formed by CB11H12- anions. In the low-T structure, the anions orient themselves so as to avoid close proximity between their highly electropositive C-H vertices and the neighboring K+ cations. In the high-T structure, the anions are orientationally disordered, although to best avoid the K+ cations, the anions likely orient themselves so that their C-H axes are aligned in one of eight possible directions along the body diagonals of the cubic unit cell. Across the transition, anion reorientational jump rates change from 6.2 × 106 s-1 in the low-T phase (332 K) to 2.6 × 1010 s-1 in the high-T phase (341 K). In tandem, K+ conductivity increases by about 30-fold across the transition, yielding a high-T phase value of 3.2 × 10-4 S cm-1 at 361 K. However, this is still about 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower than that observed for LiCB11H12 and NaCB11H12, suggesting that the relatively larger K+ cation is much more sterically hindered than Li+ and Na+ from diffusing through the anion lattice via the network of smaller interstitial sites.

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Melting of Magnesium Borohydride under High Hydrogen Pressure: Thermodynamic Stability and Effects of Nanoconfinement

Chemistry of Materials

White, James L.; Strange, Nicholas A.; Sugar, Joshua D.; Snider, Jonathan; Schneemann, Andreas; Lipton, Andrew S.; Toney, Michael F.; Allendorf, Mark; Stavila, Vitalie

The thermodynamic stability and melting point of magnesium borohydride were probed under hydrogen pressures up to 1000 bar (100 MPa) and temperatures up to 400 °C. At 400 °C, Mg(BH4)2 was found to be chemically stable between 700 and 1000 bar H2, whereas under 350 bar H2 or lower pressures, the bulk material partially decomposed into MgH2 and MgB12H12. The melting point of solvent-free Mg(BH4)2 was estimated to be 367-375 °C, which was above previously reported values by 40-90 °C. Our results indicated that a high hydrogen backpressure is needed to prevent the decomposition of Mg(BH4)2 before measuring the melting point and that molten Mg(BH4)2 can exist as a stable liquid phase between 367 and 400 °C under hydrogen overpressures of 700 bar or above. The occurrence of a pure molten Mg(BH4)2 phase enabled efficient melt-infiltration of Mg(BH4)2 into the pores of porous templated carbons (CMK-3 and CMK-8) and graphene aerogels. Both transmission electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering confirmed efficient incorporation of the borohydride into the carbon pores. The Mg(BH4)2@carbon samples exhibited comparable hydrogen capacities to bulk Mg(BH4)2 upon desorption up to 390 °C based on the mass of the active component; the onset of hydrogen release was reduced by 15-25 °C compared to the bulk. Importantly, melt-infiltration under hydrogen pressure was shown to be an efficient way to introduce metal borohydrides into the pores of carbon-based materials, helping to prevent particle agglomeration and formation of stable closo-polyborate byproducts.

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Imaging the Phase Evolution of the Li-N-H Hydrogen Storage System

Advanced Materials Interfaces

White, James L.; Baker, Alexander A.; Marcus, Matthew A.; Snider, Jonathan L.; Wang, Timothy C.; Lee, Jonathan R.I.; Allendorf, Mark; Stavila, Vitalie; El Gabaly, Farid

Complex metal hydrides provide high-density hydrogen storage, which is essential for vehicular applications. However, the utility of these materials has been limited by thermodynamic and kinetic barriers present during the dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation processes as new phases form inside parent phases. Better understanding of the mixed-phase mesostructures and their interfaces may assist in improving cyclability. In this work, the evolution of the phases during hydrogenation of lithium nitride and dehydrogenation of lithium amide with lithium hydride are probed with scanning-transmission X-ray microscopy at the nitrogen K edge. With this technique, intriguing core-shell structures were observed in particles of both partially hydrogenated Li3N and partially dehydrogenated LiNH2 + 2 LiH. The potential contributions of both internal hydrogen mobility and interfacial energies on the generation of these structures are discussed.

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The Inside-Outs of Metal Hydride Dehydrogenation: Imaging the Phase Evolution of the Li-N-H Hydrogen Storage System

Advanced Materials Interfaces

White, James L.; Baker, Alexander A.; Marcus, Matthew A.; Snider, Jonathan; Wang, Timothy C.; Lee, Jonathan R.I.; Kilcoyne, David A.L.; Allendorf, Mark; Stavila, Vitalie; El Gabaly, Farid

Complex metal hydrides provide high-density hydrogen storage, which is essential for vehicular applications. However, the practical application of these materials is limited by thermodynamic and kinetic barriers present during the dehydrogenation and rehydrogenation processes as new phases form inside parent phases. An improved understanding of the mixed-phase mesostructures and their interfaces will assist in improving cyclability. In this work, the phase evolution during hydrogenation of lithium nitride and dehydrogenation of lithium amide with lithium hydride is probed with scanning transmission X-ray microscopy at the nitrogen K edge. With this technique, core–shell structures are observed in particles of both partially hydrogenated Li3N and partially dehydrogenated LiNH2 + 2LiH. To generate these structures, the rate-limiting step must shift from internal hydrogen diffusion during hydrogenation to the formation of hydrogen gas at the surface during desorption.

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A Mechanistic Analysis of Phase Evolution and Hydrogen Storage Behavior in Nanocrystalline Mg(BH4)2 within Reduced Graphene Oxide

ACS Nano

Jeong, Sohee; Heo, Tae W.; Oktawiec, Julia; Shi, Rongpei; Kang, Shinyoung; White, James L.; Schneemann, Andreas; Zaia, Edmond W.; Wan, Liwen F.; Ray, Keith G.; Liu, Yi S.; Stavila, Vitalie; Guo, Jinghua; Long, Jeffrey R.; Wood, Brandon C.; Urban, Jeffrey J.

Magnesium borohydride (Mg(BH4)2, abbreviated here MBH) has received tremendous attention as a promising onboard hydrogen storage medium due to its excellent gravimetric and volumetric hydrogen storage capacities. While the polymorphs of MBH - alpha (α), beta (β), and gamma (γ) - have distinct properties, their synthetic homogeneity can be difficult to control, mainly due to their structural complexity and similar thermodynamic properties. Here, we describe an effective approach for obtaining pure polymorphic phases of MBH nanomaterials within a reduced graphene oxide support (abbreviated MBHg) under mild conditions (60-190 °C under mild vacuum, 2 Torr), starting from two distinct samples initially dried under Ar and vacuum. Specifically, we selectively synthesize the thermodynamically stable α phase and metastable β phase from the γ-phase within the temperature range of 150-180 °C. The relevant underlying phase evolution mechanism is elucidated by theoretical thermodynamics and kinetic nucleation modeling. The resulting MBHg composites exhibit structural stability, resistance to oxidation, and partially reversible formation of diverse [BH4]- species during de- and rehydrogenation processes, rendering them intriguing candidates for further optimization toward hydrogen storage applications.

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Understanding Superionic Conductivity in Lithium and Sodium Salts of Weakly Coordinating Closo-Hexahalocarbaborate Anions

Chemistry of Materials

Jorgensen, Mathias; Shea, Patrick T.; Tomich, Anton W.; Varley, Joel B.; Bercx, Marnik; Foulk, James W.; Cerny, Radovan; Erny; Zhou, Wei; Udovic, Terrence J.; Lavallo, Vincent; Fortune, Torben; Wood, Brandon C.; Stavila, Vitalie

Solid-state ion conductors based on closo-polyborate anions combine high ionic conductivity with a rich array of tunable properties. Cation mobility in these systems is intimately related to the strength of the interaction with the neighboring anionic network and the energy for reorganizing the coordination polyhedra. Here, we explore such factors in solid electrolytes with two anions of the weakest coordinating ability, [HCB11H5Cl6]- and [HCB11H5Br6]-, and a total of 11 polymorphs are identified for their lithium and sodium salts. Our approach combines ab initio molecular dynamics, synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and AC impedance measurements to investigate their structures, phase-transition behavior, anion orientational mobilities, and ionic conductivities. We find that M(HCB11H5X6) (M = Li, Na, X = Cl, Br) compounds exhibit order-disorder polymorphic transitions between 203 and 305 °C and display Li and Na superionic conductivity in the disordered state. Through detailed analysis, we illustrate how cation disordering in these compounds originates from a competitive interplay among the lattice symmetry, the anion reorientational mobility, the geometric and electronic asymmetry of the anion, and the polarizability of the halogen atoms. These factors are compared to other closo-polyborate-based ion conductors to suggest guidelines for optimizing the cation-anion interaction for fast ion mobility. This study expands the known solid-state poly(carba)borate-based materials capable of liquid-like ionic conductivities, unravels the mechanisms responsible for fast ion transport, and provides insights into the development of practical superionic solid electrolytes.

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Extracting an Empirical Intermetallic Hydride Design Principle from Limited Data via Interpretable Machine Learning

Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Witman, Matthew D.; Ling, Sanliang; Grant, David M.; Walker, Gavin S.; Agarwal, Sapan; Stavila, Vitalie; Allendorf, Mark

An open question in the metal hydride community is whether there are simple, physics-based design rules that dictate the thermodynamic properties of these materials across the variety of structures and chemistry they can exhibit. While black box machine learning-based algorithms can predict these properties with some success, they do not directly provide the basis on which these predictions are made, therefore complicating the a priori design of novel materials exhibiting a desired property value. In this work we demonstrate how feature importance, as identified by a gradient boosting tree regressor, uncovers the strong dependence of the metal hydride equilibrium H2 pressure on a volume-based descriptor that can be computed from just the elemental composition of the intermetallic alloy. Elucidation of this simple structure-property relationship is valid across a range of compositions, metal substitutions, and structural classes exhibited by intermetallic hydrides. This permits rational targeting of novel intermetallics for high-pressure hydrogen storage (low-stability hydrides) by their descriptor values, and we predict a known intermetallic to form a low-stability hydride (as confirmed by density functional theory calculations) that has not yet been experimentally investigated.

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Results 51–75 of 226
Results 51–75 of 226