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Materials Science/ Nanotechnology Feature

Silicon, not carbon, nanotubes best for hydrogen storage

April 24, 2008

After powering the micro-electronics revolution, silicon could carve out an important new role in speeding the debut of ultra-clean fuel cell vehicles powered by hydrogen, researchers in China suggest. Their calculations show for the first time that silicon nanotubes can store hydrogen more efficiently than their carbon nanotube counterparts.

Dapeng Cao and colleagues note that researchers have focused on the potential use of carbon nanotubes for storing hydrogen in fuel cell vehicles for years. Despite nanotubes' great promise, they have been unable to meet the hydrogen storage goals proposed by the U.S. Dept. of Energy for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. A more efficient material for hydrogen storage is needed, scientists say.

In the study, Cao's group used powerful molecular modeling tools to compare the hydrogen storage capacities of newly developed silicon nanotubes to carbon nanotubes. They found that, in theory, silicon nanotubes can absorb hydrogen molecules more efficiently than carbon nanotubes under normal fuel cell operating conditions. The calculations pave the way for tests to determine whether silicon nanotubes can meet government standards for hydrogen storage, the scientists note.

The article "Silicon Nanotube as a Promising Candidate for Hydrogen Storage: From the First Principle Calculations to Grand Canonical Monte Carlo Simulations,” which appears in today’s ACS' Journal of Physical Chemistry C: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp711754h

An overview of Monte Carlo simulation methods: http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:YuSv8VRnFTQJ:fz-juelich.de/nic-series/volume23/frenkel.pdf+grand+canonical+Monte+Carlo&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=firefox-a

SOURCES: American Chemical Society; EurekAlert.org



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