Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006, 45, 1804–1807 doi: 10.1002/anie.200504241 Nr. 08/2006 Organic Hydrogen StorageMicroporous polymers made of fused hydrocarbon rings can adsorb hydrogen Contact: Neil B. McKeown, Cardiff University (UK) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Towards Polymer-based Hydrogen Storage Materials: Engineering Ultramicroporous Cavities Within Polymers of Intrinsic Microporosity
Fossil fuels are limited and polluting, hence the
search for alternatives. One suitable and environmentally sound fuel
would be hydrogen; unfortunately there are currently few technical
possibilities for the construction of safe and efficient hydrogen
storage tanks that are suitable for cars. One possible solution to the
hydrogen storage problem is to use microporous materials such as
zeolites or activated carbons, which have many molecular sizes holes
suitable for the containment of hydrogen and can also release it when
needed.
Neil McKeown, of
Cardiff University,
UK, and his collaborators, Peter Budd (University of Manchester) and David Book (University of Birmingham) have chosen a new approach: they have developed a purely organic polymer
that can adsorb appreciable quantities of hydrogen.
The molecular chains in most organic polymers are so
flexible that they can form tightly packed structures. This means there
are no cavities inside, and thus no appreciable internal surface onto
which substances could be adsorbed. The chemists thus constructed
polymers from interlinked five- and six-membered rings. At defined
points in the molecule, two five-membered rings are connected in such a
way as to provide a contorted shape to the stiff macromolecular
structures. The contorted
molecules cannot pack together efficiently and leave gaps and
interstices. These “polymers of intrinsic microporosity” (PIMs) have
large internal surface areas of over 800 m2 per gram of
material — equivalent to the surface area of three tennis courts.
In reproducible synthetic steps, the researchers have
produced chemically homogenous materials with a uniform distribution of
pore sizes of 0.6–0.7 nm. These ultrasmall pores can absorb and then
release between 1.4 and 1.7% hydrogen. Depending on the selection of
building blocks the researchers can produce insoluble networks or
polymers that are soluble in solvents and can thus be processed into
useful shapes like common plastics.
In order for the PIMs to store enough hydrogen to be
useful they must be optimized further. “However, there is great
potential for tailoring the PIM structure by both chemistry and polymer
processing techniques” says McKeown, who anticipates that by the year
2010 they will have succeeded in preparing a PIM capable of storing up
to 6% hydrogen.
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