Hydrogen adsorption on Na-SWCNT systems
Balasaheb. J. Nagare, Darshan Habale, Sajeev Chacko, Swapan, Ghosh

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to explore hydrogen storage in Na-coated carbon nanotubes, revealing optimal Na coverage and the importance of preventing Na clustering for enhanced hydrogen capacity.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into hydrogen adsorption mechanisms on Na-SWCNTs and evaluates maximum storage capacity considering Na clustering effects.
Findings
Na atoms prefer hollow sites on SWCNTs with ~2.5 Å Na-C bonds.
Na-coated SWCNTs can adsorb up to 11.28 wt % H₂ at high Na coverage.
Charge transfer from Na induces dipoles, enhancing hydrogen uptake.
Abstract
We investigate the hydrogen adsorption capacity of Na-coated carbon nanotubes (Na-SWCNTs) using first-principles electronic structure calculations at absolute temperature and pressure. A single Na atom is always found to occupy the hollow site of a hexagonal carbon ring in all the six different SWCNTs considered, with a nearly uniform Na-C bond length of 2.5 A. Semiconducting zigzag nanotubes, (8,0) and (5,0), show stronger binding energies for the Na atom (-2.1 eV and -2.6 eV respectively), as compared to metallic SWCNTs with armchair and chiral geometries. The single Na atom can further adsorb up to six hydrogen molecules with a relatively constant binding energy of -0.26 eV/H. Mulliken population analysis shows that positively charged Na atoms with 0.82 charge transfer to nearest carbon atoms which polarizes the SWCNT leading to local dipole moments. This charge-induced…
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