Thermochemistry of Alane Complexes for Hydrogen Storage: A Theoretical and Experimental Comparison
Bryan M. Wong, David Lacina, Ida M. B. Nielsen, Jason Graetz, and Mark, D. Allendorf

TL;DR
This study combines theoretical calculations and experimental synthesis to evaluate the thermodynamic stability of various alane complexes, aiming to identify viable hydrogen storage materials for vehicular applications.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive thermodynamic analysis of thirty-eight alane complexes and establishes criteria for their stability, guiding future synthesis efforts for hydrogen storage.
Findings
Only certain tertiary amine complexes can be formed and regenerated from aluminum.
Ether complexes are not suitable for direct aluminum reaction in hydrogen storage.
The combined computational and experimental approach effectively predicts complex stability.
Abstract
Knowledge of the relative stabilities of alane (AlH3) complexes with electron donors is essential for identifying hydrogen storage materials for vehicular applications that can be regenerated by off-board methods; however, almost no thermodynamic data are available to make this assessment. To fill this gap, we employed the G4(MP2) method to determine heats of formation, entropies, and Gibbs free energies of formation for thirty-eight alane complexes with NH3-nRn (R = Me, Et; n = 0-3), pyridine, pyrazine, triethylenediamine (TEDA), quinuclidine, OH2-nRn (R = Me, Et; n = 0-2), dioxane, and tetrahydrofuran (THF). Monomer, bis, and selected dimer complex geometries were considered. Using these data, we computed the thermodynamics of the key formation and dehydrogenation reactions that would occur during hydrogen delivery and alane regeneration, from which trends in complex stability were…
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