Hydrogen Storage in Magnesium Hydride at Room Temperature Enabled by Graphene‐Stabilized Multivalent Niobium Oxides
Chaoqun Li, Ying Ding, Xiaoyue Zhang, Xuechun Hu, Xuebin Yu, Dalin Sun, Guanglin Xia
Abstract
Abstract Reversible hydrogen storage in magnesium hydride (MgH 2 ) remains hindered by intrinsic, complicated kinetic barriers associated with both hydrogen release and uptake, particularly under mild conditions. In this work, graphene‐confined, low‐crystallinity niobium oxide nanoparticles are developed to optimize the kinetic barriers across all stages of hydrogen absorption and desorption in MgH 2 . This is realized by the synergistic effect of in situ‐generated stable multivalent niobium oxide (NbO x ) and the electronically modulating graphene. It is theoretically and experimentally demonstrated that Nb 2+ enhances H 2 dissociation and diffusion, while Nb 4+ facilitates Mg─H bond cleavage and recombination of H 2 . Graphene serves a dual function by modulating the electronic environment at NbO x interfaces to facilitate charge transfer, while confining nanoparticles to prevent aggregation and hence maintain the catalytic stability of NbO x . Moreover, graphene suppresses the excessive hydrogen binding tendency of over‐reduced Nb 0 , which otherwise traps H and impedes hydrogen diffusion. This integrated structure ensures the stabilization of active Nb species and lowers energy barriers across all key steps of hydrogen storage. As a result, an effective hydrogen absorption even at 0 °C and an onset hydrogen desorption temperature of 155.9 °C is realized. This provides a versatile strategy for engineering multivalent oxides for promoting hydrogen storage of MgH 2 .