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  1. Article: Metal hydrides: an innovative and challenging conversion reaction anode for lithium-ion batteries.

    Aymard, Luc / Oumellal, Yassine / Bonnet, Jean-Pierre

    Beilstein journal of nanotechnology

    2015  Volume 6, Page(s) 1821–1839

    Abstract: The state of the art of conversion reactions of metal hydrides (MH) with lithium is presented and ... discussed in this review with regard to the use of these hydrides as anode materials for lithium-ion ... conversion reaction mechanism of MgH2, which is lithium-controlled, can be extended to others hydrides as: MH x + xLi ...

    Abstract The state of the art of conversion reactions of metal hydrides (MH) with lithium is presented and discussed in this review with regard to the use of these hydrides as anode materials for lithium-ion batteries. A focus on the gravimetric and volumetric storage capacities for different examples from binary, ternary and complex hydrides is presented, with a comparison between thermodynamic prediction and experimental results. MgH2 constitutes one of the most attractive metal hydrides with a reversible capacity of 1480 mA·h·g(-1) at a suitable potential (0.5 V vs Li(+)/Li(0)) and the lowest electrode polarization (<0.2 V) for conversion materials. Conversion process reaction mechanisms with lithium are subsequently detailed for MgH2, TiH2, complex hydrides Mg2MH x and other Mg-based hydrides. The reversible conversion reaction mechanism of MgH2, which is lithium-controlled, can be extended to others hydrides as: MH x + xLi(+) + xe(-) in equilibrium with M + xLiH. Other reaction paths-involving solid solutions, metastable distorted phases, and phases with low hydrogen content-were recently reported for TiH2 and Mg2FeH6, Mg2CoH5 and Mg2NiH4. The importance of fundamental aspects to overcome technological difficulties is discussed with a focus on conversion reaction limitations in the case of MgH2. The influence of MgH2 particle size, mechanical grinding, hydrogen sorption cycles, grinding with carbon, reactive milling under hydrogen, and metal and catalyst addition to the MgH2/carbon composite on kinetics improvement and reversibility is presented. Drastic technological improvement in order to the enhance conversion process efficiencies is needed for practical applications. The main goals are minimizing the impact of electrode volume variation during lithium extraction and overcoming the poor electronic conductivity of LiH. To use polymer binders to improve the cycle life of the hydride-based electrode and to synthesize nanoscale composite hydride can be helpful to address these drawbacks. The development of high-capacity hydride anodes should be inspired by the emergent nano-research prospects which share the knowledge of both hydrogen-storage and lithium-anode communities.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-08-31
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2583584-1
    ISSN 2190-4286
    ISSN 2190-4286
    DOI 10.3762/bjnano.6.186
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Metal hydrides

    Luc Aymard / Yassine Oumellal / Jean-Pierre Bonnet

    Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 1821-

    an innovative and challenging conversion reaction anode for lithium-ion batteries

    2015  Volume 1839

    Abstract: The state of the art of conversion reactions of metal hydrides (MH) with lithium is presented and ... discussed in this review with regard to the use of these hydrides as anode materials for lithium-ion ... TiH2, complex hydrides Mg2MHx and other Mg-based hydrides. The reversible conversion reaction mechanism ...

    Abstract The state of the art of conversion reactions of metal hydrides (MH) with lithium is presented and discussed in this review with regard to the use of these hydrides as anode materials for lithium-ion batteries. A focus on the gravimetric and volumetric storage capacities for different examples from binary, ternary and complex hydrides is presented, with a comparison between thermodynamic prediction and experimental results. MgH2 constitutes one of the most attractive metal hydrides with a reversible capacity of 1480 mA·h·g−1 at a suitable potential (0.5 V vs Li+/Li0) and the lowest electrode polarization (<0.2 V) for conversion materials. Conversion process reaction mechanisms with lithium are subsequently detailed for MgH2, TiH2, complex hydrides Mg2MHx and other Mg-based hydrides. The reversible conversion reaction mechanism of MgH2, which is lithium-controlled, can be extended to others hydrides as: MHx + xLi+ + xe− in equilibrium with M + xLiH. Other reaction paths—involving solid solutions, metastable distorted phases, and phases with low hydrogen content—were recently reported for TiH2 and Mg2FeH6, Mg2CoH5 and Mg2NiH4. The importance of fundamental aspects to overcome technological difficulties is discussed with a focus on conversion reaction limitations in the case of MgH2. The influence of MgH2 particle size, mechanical grinding, hydrogen sorption cycles, grinding with carbon, reactive milling under hydrogen, and metal and catalyst addition to the MgH2/carbon composite on kinetics improvement and reversibility is presented. Drastic technological improvement in order to the enhance conversion process efficiencies is needed for practical applications. The main goals are minimizing the impact of electrode volume variation during lithium extraction and overcoming the poor electronic conductivity of LiH. To use polymer binders to improve the cycle life of the hydride-based electrode and to synthesize nanoscale composite hydride can be helpful to address these drawbacks. The development of high-capacity ...
    Keywords conversion reaction ; lithium-ion batteries ; metal hydrides ; Technology ; T ; Chemical technology ; TP1-1185 ; Science ; Q ; Physics ; QC1-999
    Subject code 540 ; 660
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-08-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Beilstein-Institut
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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