The present invention relates to hydrogen adsorption and storage, and more particularly, to a method for constructing a fractal network structure in hydrogen storage material to enhance its hydrogen uptake capacity.
Energy resources have getting more and more important for industrialization of a modern nation. After exploitation of petroleum for two centuries, people have been confronting issues of the energy shortage and the environmental climate change. Since the Oil Crisis in 1970s, scientists have endeavored to look for alternative energy to substitute petroleum. Among them, hydrogen, which sources from inexhaustible water, is regarded as one of the promising candidates. Utilizing hydrogen as an energy resource, the final output is only water, and there is no CO2, the major cause of Global Warming, produced in hydrogen processing. Therefore, hydrogen energy is one of high-efficiency energy resources that meet the requirement of environmental protection, and will become one of main green energy resources in the coming future.
Generally, hydrogen molecules of gaseous state exist in the atmosphere. There are constraints as well as challenges in the field of hydrogen storage and transportation. To accelerate the advent of hydrogen economics, advances in the technology need to be developed. Lightness in density and tendency to explosion has made hydrogen storage more difficult. Hydrogen can be stored in gaseous, liquid, or solid compound state; for example, hydrogen can be compressed so as to be stored in a tank. However, the cost for compression or liquidization of hydrogen is quite large. Moreover, high-pressure storage usually comes along with considerations such as public safety and routine examinations.
Hydrogen can also be stored by liquid state. The atmospheric boiling point of hydrogen molecule is −253° C., so the liquidization process needs compression and cooling, which are usually energy-consuming. Under the condition of such a low temperature, hydrogen storage in the liquid state needs special devices that can operate at a low temperature. Thus, the cost is increased and the exhaustion of vaporized hydrogen needs to be further concerned.
Recently the solid-state storage methods have been proposed to adsorb and thus store hydrogen onto the surface of metal hydride or porous materials, due to the advantages of their safety and convenience. The conventional techniques put emphasis on increasing the specific surface area (SSA) of porous materials to enhance the hydrogen adsorption. On the other hand, the papers “Y. W. Li, R. T. Yang, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 128, 8136 (2006)” and “Y. W. Li, R. T. Yang, J. Phys. Chem. C 111, 11086 (2007)” have proposed applications of porous material doped with transition metal at room temperature. Through the so-called spillover process, the hydrogen storage capacity at the room temperature is enhanced.
The US Department of Energy (DOE) has proposed criteria for hydrogen storage, and some of them are (1) voluminous storage capacity, (2) compact size and light weight, (3) to adsorb and desorb hydrogen at room temperature and moderate pressure. The on-board target criteria of hydrogen storage capacity are 1.5 kw/kg (4.5 wt. %) in 2007, 2 kw/kg (6 wt. %) in 2010, and 3 kw/kg (9 wt. %) in 2015. In order to achieve the targets, intense research energy has been involved to advance the hydrogen storage technology.
At present, nano-structured carbon materials, such as activated carbon, carbon nanotube, graphite nanofiber, and graphite, can be the promising hydrogen adsorbing materials. However, there are still some disadvantages in those materials, such as slow uptake rate and irreversible adsorption. The US patent application publication (Pub. No. 2007/0082816) has disclosed a hydrogen adsorption structure and method, wherein the hydrogen adsorption structure includes a dissociation source and a receptor. A precursor material with a structure of chemical bridge is disposed between the dissociation source and the receptor, so as to induce the spillover phenomenon to cause the dissociated hydrogen atoms adsorbed by the receptor and, hence, to enhance the hydrogen storage capacity.
It is one object of the present invention to construct a fractal network structure in hydrogen storage material to improve hydrogen uptake at room temperature. The fractal network structure is composed of pores inside the hydrogen storage material so as to improve the hydrogen storage capacity at room temperature, regardless of the specific surface area (SSA) and the pore volume of the micropores. Thus, a hydrogen storage material without high SSA and pore volume can be possible to achieve high hydrogen storage capacity.
It is another object of the present invention to construct a fractal network structure with mesopores and micropores, and to optimize the regulatory distribution of pore structure, so as to improve the hydrogen storage capacity of a hydrogen storage material. By the spillover effect in the material, the receptor can store more hydrogen atoms at room temperature. The hydrogen adsorption capability can be increased without having a large SSA and a considerable pore volume of the micropores. Therefore, a hydrogen storage material without high SSA and pore volume can be possible to achieve high hydrogen storage capacity.
According to one aspect of the present invention, an embodiment provides a method for constructing a fractal network structure in hydrogen storage material to improve the hydrogen uptake at room temperature, the method comprising the following steps: providing a hydrogen storage material comprising a source and a receptor of hydrogen atoms, wherein the source is disposed above the receptor, and a chemical bridge is disposed between the source and the receptor, wherein the chemical bridge is composed of precursor material; and treating the hydrogen storage material to construct a fractal network structure of mesopores and micropores in the receptor, so as to enhance the hydrogen storage capacity of the hydrogen storage material at room temperature.
The present disclosure will become more fully understood from the detailed description given herein below and the accompanying drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus are not limitative of the present disclosure and wherein:
For further understanding and recognizing the fulfilled functions and structural characteristics of the disclosure, several exemplary embodiments cooperating with detailed description are presented as the following.
Please refer to
In this embodiment, structure of the hydrogen storage material is schematically shown in
Further, the receptor of hydrogen atoms storage 31 can be composed of a porous metal-organic framework (MOF), such as MOF-5, IRMOF-8, IRMOF-177, or the combination thereof. In addition to those materials mentioned, the receptor 31 can also be a covalent organic framework (COF), such as COF-1, COF-5, or the combination thereof.
With respect to the chemical bridge 32 in step 20, the structure of the chemical bridge 32 can be selected from the group consisting of carbon bridge, boron bridge, phosphorous bridge, sulfur bridge, and the combination thereof, but is not limited thereby. Further, the chemical bridge is composed of precursor material, which can be selected from the group consisting of sugar, polymer material, surfactant, coal tar, carbon fiber resin, and the combination thereof, but is not limited thereby.
In step 21, by constructing the fractal network structure of the pores in the hydrogen storage receptor and optimizing the distribution of pores structure, the hydrogen storage capacity of the receptor can be effectively enhanced at room temperature.
In general, the receptor 36 of hydrogen atoms can be acid-pickling treated to have the oxidizing reaction of the acid solution and the receptor 36 happened, so that the fractal network structure 38 constructed of mesopores and micropores can be formed and distributed. By controlling parameters of the oxidizing reaction, the distribution of mesopores and micropores in the fractal network structure 38 can be further regulated. In addition to the acid pickling treatment and oxidizing reaction, activation treatments of alkaline chemicals (to mix the receptor 36 with alkaline chemicals, such as NaOH and KOH, at a specific ratio, and to thermally treat the mixture to facilitate the receptor 36 to form the fractal network structure 38), physical gas treatment process (to apply high-temperature CO2 or vapor H2O to the receptor 36, so that the gasification reaction may facilitate the receptor 36 to form the fractal network structure 38), and some other synthesizing method under specific conditions can also facilitate the receptor 36 to form mesopores and micropores distributed fractal network structure 38.
As shown in
In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention IRMOF-8, a conventional material for a receptor 36 of hydrogen atoms, is used to explore the performance of the present invention in comparison to the prior arts. Here provided three IRMOF-8s of different pore structures: M_SC1 (SSA: ˜1500 m2/g), M_SC2 (SSA: ˜1000 m2/g), and M_SC3 (SSA: ˜500 m2/g) with their SSAs in the respective following parentheses.
Different treatment processes may result in IRMOF-8s with different defects and SSAs.
After processed by the method as shown in
With respect to the above description then, it is to be realized that the optimum parametric relationships for the parts of the disclosure, to include variations in size, materials, shape, form, function and manner of operation, assembly and use, are deemed readily apparent and obvious to one skilled in the art, and all equivalent relationships to those illustrated in the figures and described in the specification are intended to be encompassed by the present disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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098145270 | Dec 2009 | TW | national |