Abstract

Intermetallic metal hydrides are critical materials for hydrogen storage applications, however, metal hydrides with greater storage capacities are still needed. Within metal hydrides, the volumetric storage capacities are limited by the number of hydrogen-accommodating interstitial sites which can be simultaneously occupied given a minimum hydride nearest-neighbor distance of ≈ 2.1 Å, according to the Switendick-Westlake criterion. To date, violations of this criterion are rare. Perhaps the most well studied compounds violating this criterion are the RNiInHx compounds (R = Ce, La, Nd). Previous neutron diffraction studies on the deuterated species revealed the presence of Ni–D∙∙∙D–Ni–D∙∙∙D–Ni chains with anomalously close D∙∙∙D contacts of ≈ 1.6 Å. Yet there are no neutron vibrational spectroscopic investigations reported for these atypical hydrides. Here we use neutron vibrational spectroscopy (NVS) measurements to probe the hydrogen dynamics in LaNiInHx (x = 0.67, 1.6) and CeNiInH1.4. For x > 0.67, the presence of close H∙∙∙H contacts yields two related features in the vibrational spectrum centered near ≈ 90 meV corresponding to the oscillations of paired H atoms simultaneously occupying neighboring R3Ni tetrahedra. Notably, these features are energetically distinct from comparable vibrational motions for “unpaired” H atoms when x ≤ 0.67. To compare, we also present powder neutron diffraction and NVS measurements for the newly characterized, chemically similar Sn compounds CeNiSnH, CeNiSnH2, and CeNiSnD2. These compounds also contain R3Ni tetrahedra, however, the H-occupied tetrahedra are well separated from each other with the closest H∙∙∙H distances exceeding 2.1 Å, and the Switendick-Westlake criterion is not violated. Consequently, the spectral signature of the close H∙∙∙H contacts is absent in these hydrides.

Highlights

  • Hydrogen is emerging as a key renewable energy carrier in the push towards a decarbonized energy economy [1]

  • We investigated the compounds RNiInHx (R = La, x = 0.67, 1.6; R = Ce, x = 1.4), which contain close H∙∙∙H contacts in face-sharing R3Ni tetrahedra above x = 2⁄3

  • We studied these compounds using neutron vibrational spectroscopy (NVS) measurements coupled with density functional theory (DFT) calculations

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Summary

Introduction

Hydrogen is emerging as a key renewable energy carrier in the push towards a decarbonized energy economy [1]. Prior PND studies of the deu­ terided RNiInDx compounds [28] indicated that, as the deuterium loading increases above x = 0.67, both R3Ni interstices of the NiR3Ni trigonal bipyramids begin to become simultaneously occupied to form close D∙∙∙D contacts in the metal lattice. Such close pairings are ideally maximized at full R3Ni-site occupation (x = 1.33). We report for the first time PND and NVS measurements coupled with DFT calculations for the ternary hydrides CeNiSnH, CeNiSnH2 and CeNiSnD2 These materials share some local structural similarities with the RNiInHx com­ pounds, they do not show the crystallographic or spec­ troscopic signatures of close H∙∙∙H contacts

Experimental section
Powder neutron diffraction measurements of CeNiSnHx
Neutron vibrational spectroscopic measurements
Density functional theory calculations
Results and discussion
Comparison to structurally and chemically similar CeNiSnHx hydrides
Conclusions
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