High Pressure Hydrogen Storage on Carbon Materials for Mobile ApplicationsTools Blackman, James Michael (2005) High Pressure Hydrogen Storage on Carbon Materials for Mobile Applications. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractRecognising the difficulties encountered in measuring the adsorption of hydrogen at high pressure, a reliable volumetric differential pressure method of high accuracy and good repeatability has been developed for measurement up to ca 100 bar. The apparatus used has two identical limbs, a sample and a blank limb, between which a high accuracy differential pressure cell measures changes in pressure. By simultaneously expanding the two limbs and closely controlling the temperature of the entire system, many of the errors due to expansion of the gas can be avoided. In addition, helium blank measurements are used as a base line correction, which substantially reduces the effects caused by the rapid expansion of gas through a small port. Using this method, the hydrogen storage capacities of relatively small samples (1.0-2.5 g) of a selection of carbon materials have been accurately measured to a conservative limit of detection of 0.05 wt% and an accuracy of +/-0.02 wt%. The accuracy of the apparatus has been proven using lanthanide nickel (LaNi5), which has a known hydrogen storage capacity of 1.5 wt%, as a standard. The method has also been developed in order to analyse samples at elevated temperatures of up to 270 C. This has been demonstrated using lithium nitride (Li3N) compounds.
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