Realization of high-capacity hydrogen storage using carbon atomic chains: the role of terminations
Chun-Sheng Liu, Hui An, and Zhi Zeng

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that terminating carbon atomic chains with lithium or sodium atoms significantly enhances hydrogen storage capacity, offering a promising approach for designing efficient storage materials based on cluster-assembled structures.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel method of using metal-terminated carbon chains, especially Li and Na, to achieve high-capacity hydrogen storage with optimal binding energies at room temperature.
Findings
Li-terminated chains can hold ten H2 molecules per end with optimal binding energies.
Na-terminated chains bind H2 molecules through polarization interactions.
Charge transfer and hybridization mechanisms enhance H2 adsorption on metal-terminated chains.
Abstract
The capacity of carbon atomic chains with different terminations for hydrogen storage is studied using first-principles density functional theory calculations. Unlike the physisorption of H2 on the H-terminated chain, we show that two Li (Na) atoms each capping one end of the carbon chain can hold ten H2 molecules with optimal binding energies for room temperature storage. The hybridization of the Li 2p states with the H2 sigma orbitals contributes to the H2 adsorption. However, the binding mechanism of the H2 molecules on Na arises only from the polarization interaction between the charged Na atom and the H2. Moreover, additional H2 molecules can be bound to the carbon atoms at the chain ends due to the charge transfer between Li 2s2p (Na 3s) and C 2p states. Importantly, dimerization of these isolated metal-capped chains does not affect the hydrogen binding energy significantly. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrogen Storage and Materials · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies · Boron and Carbon Nanomaterials Research
