Impact of Severe Plastic Deformation on Kinetics and Thermodynamics of Hydrogen Storage in Magnesium and Its Alloys
Kaveh Edalati, Etsuo Akiba, Walter J. Botta, Yuri Estrin, Ricardo, Floriano, Daniel Fruchart, Thierry Grosdidier, Zenji Horita, Jacques Huot,, Hai-Wen Li, Huai-Jun Lin, Adam Revesz, Michael J. Zehetbauer

TL;DR
This paper reviews how severe plastic deformation techniques improve the kinetics, thermodynamics, and cycling stability of magnesium-based hydrogen storage materials, enabling faster hydrogen absorption/desorption and new alloy development.
Contribution
It presents recent advances in SPD processing of Mg-based materials, highlighting improvements in hydrogen storage performance and the synthesis of novel low-stability alloys.
Findings
SPD enhances hydrogen absorption/desorption kinetics.
SPD enables hydrogen binding-energy engineering.
SPD facilitates synthesis of low-stability Mg alloys.
Abstract
Magnesium and its alloys are the most investigated materials for solid-state hydrogen storage in the form of metal hydrides, but there are still unresolved problems with the kinetics and thermodynamics of hydrogenation and dehydrogenation of this group of materials. Severe plastic deformation (SPD) methods, such as equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP), high-pressure torsion (HPT), intensive rolling and fast forging, have been widely used to enhance the activation, air resistance, and hydrogenation/dehydrogenation kinetics of Mg-based hydrogen storage materials by introducing ultrafine/nanoscale grains and crystal lattice defects. These severely deformed materials, particularly in the presence of alloying additives or second-phase nanoparticles, can show not only fast hydrogen absorption/desorption kinetics but also good cycling stability. It was shown that some materials that are…
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