Hydrogen substitution by fluorine in the orthorhombic phase of LiBH4 has been investigated with quantum-mechanics calculations aiming at describing thermodynamic properties of LiB(H,F)(4) solid solutions for hydrogen storage applications. Excess enthalpy of the mixed compounds was computed with the periodic ab initio CRYSTAL09 code, within the density functional approach and localised Gaussian basis sets, and used for Calphad thermodynamic modelling. The large number of possible mixed configurations for a given fluorine content were reduced by symmetry equivalence criteria. Deep analysis of the results highlights the relevance of structures in which, for a given H/F ratio, fluorine ions are likely to belong to the same BH4 tetrahedron, rather than be dispersed over the available tetrahedra. This "locality principle" dramatically reduced the configurational space to be explored by expensive quantum-mechanical calculations. Our data show that, at room temperature, the formation of solid solutions between lithium borohydride and borofluoride is not thermodynamically favoured, so that the fluorine substitution destabilizes the pure hydride.

Hydrogen substitution by fluorine in the orthorhombic phase of LiBH4 has been investigated with quantum-mechanics calculations aiming at describing thermodynamic properties of LiB(H,F)(4) solid solutions for hydrogen storage applications. Excess enthalpy of the mixed compounds was computed with the periodic ab initio CRYSTAL09 code, within the density functional approach and localised Gaussian basis sets, and used for Calphad thermodynamic modelling. The large number of possible mixed configurations for a given fluorine content were reduced by symmetry equivalence criteria. Deep analysis of the results highlights the relevance of structures in which, for a given H/F ratio, fluorine ions are likely to belong to the same BH4 tetrahedron, rather than be dispersed over the available tetrahedra. This "locality principle" dramatically reduced the configurational space to be explored by expensive quantum-mechanical calculations. Our data show that, at room temperature, the formation of solid solutions between lithium borohydride and borofluoride is not thermodynamically favoured, so that the fluorine substitution destabilizes the pure hydride. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

A computational study on the effect of fluorine substitution in LiBH4

CORNO, Marta;
2011-01-01

Abstract

Hydrogen substitution by fluorine in the orthorhombic phase of LiBH4 has been investigated with quantum-mechanics calculations aiming at describing thermodynamic properties of LiB(H,F)(4) solid solutions for hydrogen storage applications. Excess enthalpy of the mixed compounds was computed with the periodic ab initio CRYSTAL09 code, within the density functional approach and localised Gaussian basis sets, and used for Calphad thermodynamic modelling. The large number of possible mixed configurations for a given fluorine content were reduced by symmetry equivalence criteria. Deep analysis of the results highlights the relevance of structures in which, for a given H/F ratio, fluorine ions are likely to belong to the same BH4 tetrahedron, rather than be dispersed over the available tetrahedra. This "locality principle" dramatically reduced the configurational space to be explored by expensive quantum-mechanical calculations. Our data show that, at room temperature, the formation of solid solutions between lithium borohydride and borofluoride is not thermodynamically favoured, so that the fluorine substitution destabilizes the pure hydride. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2011
Hydrogen substitution by fluorine in the orthorhombic phase of LiBH4 has been investigated with quantum-mechanics calculations aiming at describing thermodynamic properties of LiB(H,F)(4) solid solutions for hydrogen storage applications. Excess enthalpy of the mixed compounds was computed with the periodic ab initio CRYSTAL09 code, within the density functional approach and localised Gaussian basis sets, and used for Calphad thermodynamic modelling. The large number of possible mixed configurations for a given fluorine content were reduced by symmetry equivalence criteria. Deep analysis of the results highlights the relevance of structures in which, for a given H/F ratio, fluorine ions are likely to belong to the same BH4 tetrahedron, rather than be dispersed over the available tetrahedra. This "locality principle" dramatically reduced the configurational space to be explored by expensive quantum-mechanical calculations. Our data show that, at room temperature, the formation of solid solutions between lithium borohydride and borofluoride is not thermodynamically favoured, so that the fluorine substitution destabilizes the pure hydride.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
mh2010_corno_published.pdf

file disponibile solo agli amministratori

Descrizione: Articolo principale
Tipologia: Altro materiale allegato
Licenza: DRM non definito
Dimensione 767.18 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
767.18 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11579/82322
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 39
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 39
social impact