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1.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 127(29): 14303-14316, 2023 Jul 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37529664

ABSTRACT

Rare earth oxyhydrides REOxH(3-2x), with RE = Y, Sc, or Gd and a cationic FCC lattice, are reversibly photochromic in nature. It is known that structural details and anion (O2-:H-) composition dictate the efficiency of the photochromic behavior. The mechanism behind the photochromism is, however, not yet understood. In this study, we use 1H, 2H, 17O, and 89Y solid-state NMR spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the various yttrium, hydrogen, and oxygen local environments, anion oxidation states, and hydride ion dynamics. DFT models of YOxH(3-2x) with both anion-ordered and anion-disordered sublattices are constructed for a range of compositions and show a good correlation with the experimental NMR parameters. Two-dimensional 17O-1H and 89Y-1H NMR correlation experiments reveal heterogeneities in the samples, which appear to consist of hydride-rich (x ≈ 0.25) and hydride-poor domains (x ≈ 1) rather than a single composition with homogeneous anion mixing. The compositional variation (as indicated by the different x values in YOxH(3-2x)) is determined by comparing static 1H NMR line widths with calculated 1H-1H dipolar couplings of yttrium oxyhydride models. The 1D 17O MAS spectrum demonstrates the presence of a small percentage of hydroxide (OH-) ions. DFT modeling indicates a reaction between the protons of hydroxides and hydrides to form molecular hydrogen (H+ + H- → H2). 1H MAS NMR indicates the presence of a mobile component that, based on this finding, is attributed to trapped molecular H2 in the lattice.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(6): 8033-8045, 2023 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36734486

ABSTRACT

Accurate, cost-efficient, and safe hydrogen sensors will play a key role in the future hydrogen economy. Optical hydrogen sensors based on metal hydrides are attractive owing to their small size and costs and the fact that they are intrinsically safe. These sensors rely on suitable sensing materials, of which the optical properties change when they absorb hydrogen if they are in contact with a hydrogen-containing environment. Here, we illustrate how we can use alloying to tune the properties of hydrogen-sensing materials by considering thin films consisting of tantalum doped with ruthenium. Using a combination of optical transmission measurements, ex situ and in situ X-ray diffraction, and neutron and X-ray reflectometry, we show that introducing Ru in Ta results in a solid solution of Ta and Ru up to at least 30% Ru. The alloying has two major effects: the compression of the unit cell with increasing Ru doping modifies the enthalpy of hydrogenation and thereby shifts the pressure window in which the material absorbs hydrogen to higher hydrogen concentrations, and it reduces the amount of hydrogen absorbed by the material. This allows one to tune the pressure/concentration window of the sensor and its sensitivity and makes Ta1-yRuy an ideal hysteresis-free tunable hydrogen-sensing material with a sensing range of >7 orders of magnitude in pressure. In a more general perspective, these results demonstrate that one can rationally tune the properties of metal hydride optical hydrogen-sensing layers by appropriate alloying.

3.
Nature ; 613(7945): 629, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36694017
5.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 126(34): 14742-14749, 2022 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36081901

ABSTRACT

To develop an understanding of the photochromic effect in rare-earth metal oxyhydride thin films (REH3-2x O x , here RE = Y), we explore the aliovalent doping of the RE cation. We prepared Ca-doped yttrium oxyhydride thin films ((Ca z Y1-z )H x O y ) by reactive magnetron cosputtering with Ca doping concentrations between 0 and 36 at. %. All of the films are semiconductors with a constant optical band gap for Ca content below 15%, while the band gap expands for compositions above 15%. Ca doping affects the photochromic properties, resulting in (1) a lower photochromic contrast, likely due to a lower H- concentration, and (2) a faster bleaching speed, caused by a higher pre-exponential factor. Overall, these results point to the importance of the H- concentration for the formation of a "darkened" phase and the local rearrangement of these H- for the kinetics of the process.

6.
ACS Energy Lett ; 7(5): 1586-1593, 2022 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35601628

ABSTRACT

Finding alternative ways to tailor the electronic properties of a catalyst to actively and selectively drive reactions of interest has been a growing research topic in the field of electrochemistry. In this Letter, we investigate the tuning of the surface electronic properties of electrocatalysts via polymer modification. We show that when a nickel oxide water oxidation catalyst is coated with polytetrafluoroethylene, stable Ni-CF x bonds are introduced at the nickel oxide/polymer interface, resulting in shifting of the reaction selectivity away from the oxygen evolution reaction and toward hydrogen peroxide formation. It is shown that the electron-withdrawing character of the surface fluorocarbon molecule leaves a slight positive charge on the water oxidation intermediates at the adjacent active nickel sites, making their bonds weaker. The concept of modifying the surface electronic properties of an electrocatalyst via stable polymer modification offers an additional route to tune multipathway reactions in polymer/electrocatalyst environments, like with ionomer-modified catalysts or with membrane electrode assemblies.

7.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 126(4): 2276-2284, 2022 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35145577

ABSTRACT

Thin films of rare earth metal oxyhydrides show a photochromic effect, the precise mechanism of which is yet unknown. Here, we made thin films of NdH3-2x O x and show that we can change the band gap, crystal structure, and photochromic contrast by tuning the composition (O2-:H-) via the sputtering deposition pressure. To protect these films from rapid oxidation, we add a thin ALD coating of Al2O3, which increases the lifetime of the films from 1 day to several months. Encapsulation of the films also influences photochromic bleaching, changing the time dependency from first-order kinetics. As well, the partial annealing which occurs during the ALD process results in a dramatically slower bleaching speed, revealing the importance of defects for the reversibility (bleaching speed) of photochromism.

8.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(45): 10969-10974, 2021 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34738818

ABSTRACT

Metal hydrides may play a paramount role in a future hydrogen economy. While most applications are based on nanostructured and confined materials, studies considering the structural response of these materials to hydrogen concentrate on bulk material. Here, using in situ in- and out-of-plane X-ray diffraction and reflectometry, we study the fcc ↔ fct transition in Hf thin films, an optical hydrogen-sensing material. We show that the confinement of Hf affects this transition: compared to bulk Hf, the transition is pushed to a higher hydrogen-to-metal ratio, the tetragonality of the fct phase is reduced, and phase coexistence is suppressed. These nanoconfinement effects ensure the hysteresis-free response of hafnium to hydrogen, enabling its remarkable performance as a hydrogen-sensing material. In a wider perspective, the results highlight the profound influences of the nanostructuring and nanoconfinement of metal hydrides on their structural response to hydrogen with a significant impact on their applicability in future devices.

9.
Inorg Chem ; 60(19): 15024-15030, 2021 Oct 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34542268

ABSTRACT

Phase segregation in hydride-forming alloys may persist under the action of multiple hydrogenation/dehydrogenation cycles. We use this effect to destabilize metal hydrides in the immiscible Mg-Mn system. Here, in the MgxMn1-x thin films, the Mg and Mn domains are chemically segregated at the nanoscale. In Mn-rich compositions, the desorption pressure of hydrogen from MgH2 is elevated at a given temperature, indicating a thermodynamic destabilization. The increase in the desorption pressure of hydrogen reaches ∼2.5 orders in magnitude for x = 0.30 at moderate temperatures. Such large thermodynamic destabilization allows the MgH2 to reversibly absorb and desorb hydrogen even at room temperature. Our strategy to use immiscible elements for destabilization of MgH2 is effective and opens up the possibility for the development of advanced and low-cost hydrogen storage and supply systems.

10.
Chemphyschem ; 22(17): 1774-1784, 2021 09 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34213060

ABSTRACT

In many experimental investigations of thermodynamic equilibrium or kinetic properties of series of similar reactions it is found that the enthalpies and entropies derived from Van 't Hoff or Arrhenius plots exhibit a strong linear correlation. The origin of this Enthalpy-Entropy compensation, which is strongly related to the coalescence tendency of Van 't Hoff or Arrhenius plots, is not necessarily due to a physical/chemical/biological process. It can also be a merely statistical artefact. A new method, called Combined K-CQF makes it possible both to quantify the degree of coalescence of experimental Van 't Hoff lines and to verify whether or not the Enthalpy-Entropy Compensation is of a statistical origin at a desired confidence level. The method is universal and can handle data sets with any degree of coalescence of Van 't Hoff (or Arrhenius) plots. The new method requires only a standard least square fit of the enthalpyΔH versus entropy ΔS plot to determine the two essential dimensionless parameters K and CQF. The parameter K indicates the position (in inverse temperature) of the coalescence region of Van 't Hoff plots and CQF is a quantitative measure of the smallest spread of the Van 't Hoff plots. The position of the (K, CQF) couple with respect to universal confidence contours determined from a large number of simulations of random Van 't Hoff plots indicates straightforwardly whether or not the ΔH-ΔS compensation is a statistical artefact.

11.
ACS Photonics ; 8(3): 709-715, 2021 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33842670

ABSTRACT

Rare-earth oxyhydride REO x H3-2x thin films prepared by air-oxidation of reactively sputtered REH2 dihydrides show a color-neutral, reversible photochromic effect at ambient conditions. The present work shows that the O/H anion ratio, as well as the choice of the cation, allow to largely tune the extent of the optical change and its speed. The bleaching time, in particular, can be reduced by an order of magnitude by increasing the O/H ratio, indirectly defined by the deposition pressure of the parent REH2. The influence of the cation (RE = Sc, Y, Gd) under comparable deposition conditions is discussed. Our data suggest that REs of a larger ionic radius form oxyhydrides with a larger optical contrast and faster bleaching speed, hinting to a dependency of the photochromic mechanism on the anion site-hopping.

12.
Chemphyschem ; 21(15): 1632-1643, 2020 08 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32573925

ABSTRACT

Enthalpy-entropy compensation (EEC) is very often encountered in chemistry, biology and physics. Its origin is widely discussed since it would allow, for example, a very accurate tuning of the thermodynamic properties as a function of the reactants. However, EEC is often discarded as a statistical artefact, especially when only a limited temperature range is considered. We show that the likeliness of a statistical origin of an EEC can be established with a compensation quality factor (CQF) that depends only on the measured enthalpies and entropies and the experimental temperature range. This is directly derived from a comparison of the CQF with threshold values obtained from a large number of simulations with randomly generated Van 't Hoff plots. The value of CQF is furthermore a direct measure of the existence of a genuine isoequilibrium or isokinetic relationship.

13.
Inorg Chem ; 59(10): 6800-6807, 2020 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32379436

ABSTRACT

Thin films often exhibit fascinating properties, but the understanding of the underlying mechanism behind such properties is not simple. This is partially because of the limited structural information available. The hurdle in obtaining such information is especially high for textured thin films such as Mg-rich MgxTi1-x, a promising switchable smart coating material. Although these metastable thin films are seen as solid solution alloys by conventional crystallographic methods, their hydrogen-induced optical transition is hardly understood by a solid solution model. In this study, we collect atomic pair distribution function (PDF) data for a Mg0.7Ti0.3Hy thin film in situ on hydrogenation and successfully resolve TiH2 clusters of an average size of 30 Å embedded in the Mg matrix. This supports the chemically segregated model previously proposed for this system. We also observe the emergence of a previously unknown intermediate face-centered tetragonal phase during hydrogenation of the Mg matrix. This phase appears between Mg and MgH2 to reduce lattice mismatch, thereby preventing pulverization and facilitating rapid hydrogen uptake. This work may shed new light on the hydrogen-induced properties of Mg-rich MgxTi1-x thin films.

14.
Inorg Chem ; 59(5): 2758-2764, 2020 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32058704

ABSTRACT

Magnesium-based transition-metal hydrides are attractive hydrogen energy materials because of their relatively high gravimetric and volumetric hydrogen storage capacities combined with low material costs. However, most of them are too stable to release the hydrogen under moderate conditions. Here we synthesize the hydride of Mg2FexSi1-x, which consists of Mg2FeH6 and Mg2Si with the same cubic structure. For silicon-rich hydrides (x < 0.5), mostly the Mg2Si phase is observed by X-ray diffraction, and Mössbauer spectroscopy indicates the formation of an octahedral FeH6 unit. Transmission electron microscopy measurements indicate that Mg2FeH6 domains are nanometer-sized and embedded in a Mg2Si matrix. This synthesized metallographic structure leads to distortion of the Mg2FeH6 lattice, resulting in thermal destabilization. Our results indicate that nanometer-sized magnesium-based transition-metal hydrides can be formed into a matrix-forced organization induced by the hydrogenation of nonequilibrium Mg-Fe-Si composites. In this way, the thermodynamics of hydrogen absorption and desorption can be tuned, which allows for the development of lightweight and inexpensive hydrogen storage materials.

15.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(17): 15489-15497, 2019 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30964257

ABSTRACT

Nanostructured metal hydrides are able to efficiently detect hydrogen in optical sensors. In the literature, two nanostructured systems based on metal hydrides have been proposed for this purpose each with its own detection principle: continuous sub-100 nm thin films read out via optical reflectance/transmittance changes and nanoparticle arrays for which the detection relies on localized surface plasmon resonance. Despite their apparent similarities, their optical and structural response to hydrogen has never been directly compared. In response, for the case of Pd1- yAu y ( y = 0.15-0.30) alloys, we directly compare these two systems and establish that they are distinctively different. We show that the dissimilar optical response is not caused by the different optical readout principles but results from a fundamentally different structural response to hydrogen due to the different nanostructurings. The measurements empirically suggest that these differences cannot be fully accounted by surface effects but that the nature of the film-substrate interaction plays an important role and affects both the hydrogen solubility and the metal-to-metal hydride transition. In a broader perspective, our results establish that the specifics of nanoconfinement dictate the structural properties of metal hydrides, which in turn control the properties of nanostructured devices including the sensing characteristics of optical hydrogen sensors and hydride-based active plasmonic systems.

16.
Nat Mater ; 18(5): 489-495, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30936481

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen-air mixtures are highly flammable. Hydrogen sensors are therefore of paramount importance for timely leak detection during handling. However, existing solutions do not meet the stringent performance targets set by stakeholders, while deactivation due to poisoning, for example by carbon monoxide, is a widely unsolved problem. Here we present a plasmonic metal-polymer hybrid nanomaterial concept, where the polymer coating reduces the apparent activation energy for hydrogen transport into and out of the plasmonic nanoparticles, while deactivation resistance is provided via a tailored tandem polymer membrane. In concert with an optimized volume-to-surface ratio of the signal transducer uniquely offered by nanoparticles, this enables subsecond sensor response times. Simultaneously, hydrogen sorption hysteresis is suppressed, sensor limit of detection is enhanced, and sensor operation in demanding chemical environments is enabled, without signs of long-term deactivation. In a wider perspective, our work suggests strategies for next-generation optical gas sensors with functionalities optimized by hybrid material engineering.

17.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 10(6): 1342-1348, 2019 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30844288

ABSTRACT

Thin films of rare-earth (RE)-oxygen-hydrogen compounds prepared by reactive magnetron sputtering show a unique color-neutral photochromic effect at ambient conditions. While their optical properties have been studied extensively, the understanding of the relationship between photochromism, chemical composition, and structure is limited. Here we establish a ternary RE-O-H composition-phase diagram based on chemical composition analysis by a combination of Rutherford backscattering and elastic recoil detection. The photochromic films are identified as oxyhydrides with a wide composition range described by the formula REO xH3-2 x where 0.5 ≤ x ≤ 1.5. We propose an anion-disordered structure model based on the face-centered cubic unit cell where the O2- and H- anions occupy tetrahedral and octahedral interstices. The optical band gap varies continuously with the anion ratio, demonstrating the potential of band gap tuning for reversible optical switching applications.

18.
Phys Rev Lett ; 121(25): 255503, 2018 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30608857

ABSTRACT

Magnesium thin films covered with a layer of Pd absorb hydrogen at much higher pressures than bulk Mg. Such an effect was originally explained as a consequence of elastic clamping on Mg by the capping Pd layer. An alternative interpretation later suggested that the pressure increase could originate from simple alloying between Mg and Pd. Here we resolve this controversy by measuring the hydrogenation and dehydrogenation isotherms of Mg-Pd thin film alloys over a wide range of compositions. Our results disentangle the effects of elastic clamping and alloying and highlight the role of plastic deformations.

19.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 1846, 2017 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29184061

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen is a key element in the energy transition. Hydrogen-metal systems have been studied for various energy-related applications, e.g., for their use in reversible hydrogen storage, catalysis, hydrogen sensing, and rechargeable batteries. These applications depend strongly on the thermodynamics of the metal-hydrogen system. Therefore, tailoring the thermodynamics of metal-hydrogen interactions is crucial for tuning the properties of metal hydrides. Here we present a case of large metal hydride destabilization by elastic strain. The addition of small amounts of zirconium to yttrium leads to a compression of the yttrium lattice, which is maintained during (de)hydrogenation cycles. As a result, the equilibrium hydrogen pressure of YH2 ↔ YH3 can be rationally and precisely tuned up to five orders of magnitude at room temperature. This allows us to realize a hydrogen sensor which indicates the ambient hydrogen pressure over four orders of magnitude by an eye-visible color change.

20.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 53(45): 12081-5, 2014 Nov 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25244324

ABSTRACT

The catalytic properties of Pd alloy thin films are enhanced by a thin sputtered PTFE coating, resulting in profound improvements in hydrogen adsorption and desorption in Pd-based and Pd-catalyzed hydrogen sensors and hydrogen storage materials. The remarkably enhanced catalytic performance is attributed to chemical modifications of the catalyst surface by the sputtered PTFE leading to a possible change in the binding strength of the intermediate species involved in the hydrogen sorption process.

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