A "cagey" strategy
to stack more hydrogen in nanoscale scaffoldings
made of zinc-based boxes may yield a viable approach
to storing hydrogen and, ultimately, replacing fossil
fuels in future automobiles, according to new results
from National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) researchers.
Using
beams of neutrons as probes, NIST scientists determined
where hydrogen latches onto the lattice-like arrangement
of zinc and oxygen clusters in a custom-made material
known as a metal-organic framework, or MOF. Called
MOF5, the particular nanoscale material studied
by Taner Yildirim and Michael Hartman has four types
of docking sites, including a "surprising" three-dimensional
network of "nano-cages" that appears to form after
other sites load up with hydrogen.
This finding, reported in Physical Review Letters,*
suggests that MOF materials might be engineered to
optimize both the storage of hydrogen and its release
under normal vehicle operating conditions. It also
suggests that MOFs might be used as templates for
interlinking hydrogen nano-cages, creating materials
with unusual properties due to a phenomenon known
as quantum confinement. In a sense, this discovery
is a bonus.
Yildirim
and Hartman found that the two most stable sites
in the scaffolding already offer considerable room
for storing hydrogen, accounting for the interest
MOFs already have attracted. Earlier studies reported
that, at about –200 degrees Celsius, MOF5 could hold
less than 2 percent of its weight in hydrogen.
The
NIST research indicates ample room for improvement.
At very low temperatures, hydrogen uptake approached
10 percent of the material's weight. (The FreedomCar
and Fuel Partnership involving the Department of
Energy and the nation's "Big 3" automakers has set
a level of about 6 percent as a minimum capacity
for economically viable hydrogen storage.) The bulk
of the hydrogen was held in nanometer-scale cavities
inside the box-like arrangements of zinc and oxygen
clusters.
"Neutron diffraction measurements clearly show that
the molecules are packed in a fashion similar to
the way apples or oranges fill a bowl," Yildirim
explains. The unexpected nano-cages introduce the
potential for spillover capacity, so to speak.
Hydrogen storage levels of 10 percent are encouraging,
but these results were achieved at impractically
low temperatures. Yildirim and Hartman say they hope
better understanding of how hydrogen molecules tether
to MOFs will ultimately lead to improved materials
suitable for practical applications.
The research was carried out at the NIST Center
for Neutron Research and partially supported by the
U.S. Department of Energy. More information can be
obtained at http://www.ncnr.nist.gov/staff/taner/h2 .
*T. Yildirim and M.R. Hartman, Direct observation
of hydrogen adsorption sites and nano-cage formation
in metal-organic frameworks (MOF). Phys. Rev. Lett.,
95, 215504 (2005).
Contact: Mark Bello
mark.bello@nist.gov
301-975-3776
National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST)
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