http://www.energyefficiencynews.comAfion Media Ltd New material could be the answer for hydrogen storage <p>A new material devised by Greek scientists could be the answer for safe and efficient hydrogen storage.</p> <p>One of the major hurdles to using hydrogen as a fuel is an effective and convenient means of storing it &ndash; particularly for use in transportation. Scientists around the globe have explored myriad different materials in efforts to find one with potential.</p> <p>Now a team from the University of Crete in Greece think that they may have come up with a viable option that almost meets US Department of Energy targets.</p> <p>One of the options that scientists have explored is carbon nanotubes &ndash; tiny cylinders of carbon about 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. But George E. Froudakis and his team take this idea one stage further.</p> <p>The scientists have designed a material consisting of sheets or &lsquo;floors&rsquo; of graphene &ndash; layers of carbon just one atom thick &ndash; connected together by vertical columns of carbon nanotubes. The structure allows hydrogen to be stored in the gaps between the nanotube pillars and the graphene &lsquo;floors&rsquo;. They also add lithium ions to enhance its hydrogen storage capacity.</p> <p>While they haven&rsquo;t built the &lsquo;pillared graphene&rsquo; structure yet, the scientists&rsquo; calculations indicate that it could store up to 41 g of hydrogen per litre, just short of the DOE target of 45 g per litre.</p> <p>&ldquo;Our material is capable of hosting a large number of hydrogen molecules without the aid of external pressure,&rdquo; says Froudakis. &ldquo;Thus the material [should be] safer for usage on automobile applications and will provide faster loading times than any other existing material.&rdquo;</p> <p>If the structure can be built and the predictions are correct, the new material could overcome one of the major drawbacks that has prevented hydrogen from being used extensively as a fuel for automotive applications, say the scientists.</p> <p>For further information:<br /> <a rel="external" href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl801417w">Dimitrakakis, G. K., Tylianakis, E., and Froudakis, G. E., Pillared Graphene: A New 3-D Network Nanostructure for Enhanced Hydrogen Storage. <em>Nano Letters</em> (2008), doi: 10.1021/nl801417</a></p> http://www.energyefficiencynews.com/i/1385/ 2008-10-06T00:00:00-00:00 Hydrogen and fuel cells, road transport, fuels, hydrogen storage, research and development