Abstract

Vanadium-based body-centered-cubic (BCC) alloys are ideal hydrogen storage media because of their high reversible hydrogen capacities at moderate conditions. However, the rapid capacity decay in hydrogen ab-/desorption cycles prevents their practical application. In this work, V-based BCC alloys with three different V contents (V20Ti38Cr41.4Fe0.6, V40Ti28.5Cr30.1Fe1.4, V60Ti19Cr19Fe2, named as V20, V40, V60) were prepared by arc melting, and their microstructures and hydrogen ab-/desorption properties were investigated systematically. XRD results show that there is a number of C15-Laves phase presence in V20, which does not appear in V40 and V60. Meanwhile, the lattice constant of the BCC phase clearly decreases as the V content rises. These differences result in a hydrogen storage capacity of only 1.82 wt% for V20 alloy, but 2.13 wt% for V40 and 2.14 wt% for V60, and an increment in hydrogen ab-/desorption plateau pressure. The V40 and V60 alloys are chosen in de-/hydrogenation cycle test owing to higher effective storage capacities, and the results show that the V60 alloy has better cycle durability. According to the microstructural analysis of the two alloys during the cycles, the micro-strain accumulates, the cell volume expands, the particles pulverizes and the defects increase during the cycles, which eventually lead to the attenuation of the hydrogen storage capacity. The increment of the V content obviously improves the elastic properties of the alloy, which further diminishes the micro-strain accumulation, cell volume expansion, particle pulverization and defect increase, eventually resulting in a higher capacity retention and better cyclic durability.

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