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Martin Scrivener (martin@scrivenerpublishing.com)
Phillip Carmical (pcarmical@scrivenerpublishing.com)
Edited by
Mehmet Sankir
Nurdan Demirci Sankir
This edition first published 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA and Scrivener Publishing LLC, 100 Cummings Center, Suite 541J, Beverly, MA 01915, USA
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
ISBN 978-1-119-45988-0
Our heavy dependence on fossil fuel resources, which is the cause of worldwide problems, has to be reduced in order to improve the environment and, in turn, the impact it has on human health. Hydrogen has drawn great attention as a nonpolluting energy carrier due to its diverse methods of production and storage. In the first volume of our series, Advances in Hydrogen Production and Storage, we thoroughly introduced hydrogen production technologies. However, since hydrogen storage is considered a key technology for stationary and portable power generation, especially for transportation, the second volume of the series is devoted to hydrogen storage technologies. This volume covers the novel technologies used to efficiently store and distribute hydrogen. Discussed are the underlying basics, as well as advanced details, of hydrogen storage technologies, which is highly beneficial for science and engineering students as well as experienced engineers and researchers. Additionally, the book was written to provide a comprehensive approach to the area of hydrogen storage for readers from a wide variety of backgrounds. The intent of the book is to satisfy the need for a broad coverage of the hydrogen storage technologies. Therefore, it was written by distinguished authors with knowledge and expertise in areas of hydrogen storage, whose contributions can benefit readers from universities and industries. The editors wish to thank the authors for their efforts in writing their chapters.
We have separated the book into two major parts: Chemical and Electrochemical Hydrogen Storage and Carbon-Based Materials for Hydrogen Storage. In Part I, hydrogen storage technologies within the context of chemical and electrochemical methods are clearly discussed in five chapters. Chapter 1 focuses on a multistage compression system based on metal hydrides for hydrogen storage. It also includes the development of a validated numerical analysis of a three-stage compression system. Chapter 2 discusses metal-N-H systems and their physicochemical properties for hydrogen storage. Mg-based nanomaterials with enhanced sorption kinetics for hydrogen storage are thoroughly introduced in Chapter 3. Next, in Chapter 4, evaluation of gaseous and electrochemical hydrogen storage performances of Ti-Zr-Ni alloys are analyzed. The final chapter of Part I, Chapter 5, deals with the electrochemical methods for hydrogenation/dehydrogenation of metal hydrides. The five chapters in Part II are devoted to carbon-based materials for hydrogen storage. Chapter 6 covers the activated carbon obtained from agro-industrial waste for use in hydrogen storage. Chapter 7 introduces the concept of hydrogen storage with carbonaceous materials. Next, Chapter 8 provides a fairly comprehensive introduction to hydrogen storage characteristics of graphene addition in hydrogen storage materials. Part II concludes with a discussion in Chapter 9 of the crucial features of hydrogen adsorption of nanotextured carbon-based materials.
Series Editors
Mehmet Sankır, PhD. and Nurdan Demirci Sankır, PhD.
Department of Materials Science and Nanotechnology Engineering,
TOBB University of Economics and Technology