Metal-organic Framework - MOFs For Hydrogen Storage - Structural Impacts On Hydrogen Storage Capacity

Structural Impacts On Hydrogen Storage Capacity

To date, hydrogen storage in MOFs at room temperature is a battle between maximizing storage capacity and maintaining reasonable desorption rates, while conserving the integrity of the adsorbent framework (e.g. completely evacuating pores, preserving the MOF structure, etc.) over many cycles. There are two major strategies governing the design of MOFs for hydrogen storage:

1) to increase the theoretical storage capacity of the material, and
2) to bring the operating conditions closer to ambient temperature and pressure. Rowsell and Yaghi have identified several directions to these ends in some of the early papers.

Read more about this topic:  Metal-organic Framework, MOFs For Hydrogen Storage

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