Ammonium borohydride, NH4BH4, has a high hydrogen content of ?m = 24.5 wt% H2 and releases 18 wt% H2 below T = 160 °C. However, the half-life of bulk NH4BH4 at ambient temperatures, ~6 h, is insufficient for practical applications. The decomposition of NH4BH4 (ABH2) was studied at variable hydrogen and argon back pressures to investigate possible pressure mediated stabilization effects. The hydrogen release rate from solid ABH2 at ambient temperatures is reduced by ~16 % upon increasing the hydrogen back pressure from 5 to 54 bar. Similar results were obtained using argon pressure and the observed stabilization may be explained by a positive volume of activation in the transition state leading to hydrogen release. Nanoconfinement in mesoporous silica, MCM-41, was investigated as alternative means to stabilize NH4BH4. However, other factors appear to significantly destabilize NH4BH4 and it rapidly decomposes at ambient temperatures into [(NH3)2BH2][BH4] (DADB) in accordance with the bulk reaction scheme. The hydrogen desorption kinetics from nanoconfined [(NH3)2BH2][BH4] is moderately enhanced as evidenced by a reduction in the DSC decomposition peak temperature of ?T = -13 °C as compared to the bulk material. Finally, we note a surprising result, storage of DADB at temperature
Revised: April 25, 2013 |
Published: January 21, 2013
Citation
Nielsen T.K., A.J. Karkamkar, M.E. Bowden, F. Besenbacher, T.R. Jensen, and T. Autrey. 2013.Methods to Stabilize and Destabilize Ammonium Borohydride.Dalton Transactions 42, no. 3:680-687.PNNL-SA-89183.doi:10.1039/C2DT31591B