| Carbon
cages can hold super-dense volumes of nearly metallic hydrogen
Hydrogen
could be a clean, abundant energy source, but it's difficult to store in
bulk. In new research, materials scientists at Rice University have made
the surprising discovery that tiny carbon capsules called buckyballs are
so strong they can hold volumes of hydrogen nearly as dense as those at
the center of Jupiter.
The research appears on the
March 2008 cover of the American Chemical Society's journal Nano Letters.
"Based on our calculations,
it appears that some buckyballs are capable of holding volumes of hydrogen
so dense as to be almost metallic," said lead researcher Boris Yakobson,
professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Rice. "It
appears they can hold about 8 percent of their weight in hydrogen at room
temperature, which is considerably better than the federal target of 6
percent."
The Department of Energy has
devoted more than $1 billion to developing technologies for hydrogen-powered
automobiles, including technologies to cost-effectively store hydrogen
for use in cars. Hydrogen is the lightest element in the universe, and
it is very difficult to store in bulk. For hydrogen cars to be competitive
with gasoline-powered cars, they need a comparable range and a reasonably
compact fuel system. It's estimated that a hydrogen-powered car with a
suitable range will require a storage system with densities greater than
those found in pure, liquid hydrogen.
Yakobson said scientists have
long argued the merits of storing hydrogen in tiny, molecular containers
like buckyballs, and experiments have shown that it's possible to store
small volumes of hydrogen inside buckyballs. The new research by Yakobson
and former postdoctoral researchers Olga Pupysheva and Amir Farajian offers
the first method of precisely calculating how much hydrogen a buckyball
can hold before breaking.
Buckyballs, which were discovered
at Rice more than 20 years ago, are part of a family of carbon molecules
called fullerenes. The family includes carbon nanotubes, the typical 60-atom
buckyball and larger buckyballs composed of 2,000 or more atoms.
"Bonds between carbon atoms
are among the strongest chemical bonds in nature," Yakobson said. "These
bonds are what make diamond the hardest known substance, and our research
showed that it takes an enormous amount of internal pressure to deform
and break the carbon-carbon bonds in a fullerene."
Using a computer model, Yakobson's
research team has tracked the strength of each atomic bond in a buckyball
and simulated what happened to the bonds as more hydrogen atoms were packed
inside. Yakobson said the model promises to be particularly useful because
it is scalable, that is it can calculate exactly how much hydrogen a buckyball
of any given size can hold, and it can also tell scientists how overstuffed
buckyballs burst open and release their cargo.
If a feasible way to produce
hydrogen-filled buckyballs is developed, Yakobson said, it might be possible
to store them as a powder.
"They will likely assemble into
weak molecular crystals or form a thin powder," he said. "They might find
use in their whole form or be punctured under certain conditions to release
pure hydrogen for fuel cells or other types of engines."
The research was supported by
the Office of Naval Research and the Department of Energy. |