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The optimized composite achieves complete dehydrogenation within 1 h at 50 °C, whose maximum hydrogen release reaches 2314 ml/g.
The ABNi maximum hydrogen release is 4.5 wt% which is much higher compared to 3 wt% of neat AB at this temperature.
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The cell lysis was calculated as a percentage of the maximum released radioactivity: ((released radioactivity−spontaneous release)/(maximum released radioactivity−spontaneous release)) × 100%.
The maximum deposition time (180 s) was chosen because at that moment, hydrogen release almost stopped for both types of PS, i.e., the redox process was too weak for the valuable amount of copper deposition or finished.
A maximum hydrogen storage capacity of 4.77 wt% is achieved at 50 °C and the entire (100%) stored hydrogen is released in the temperature range of 90 125 °C.
Maximum hydrogen production is desired in optimization.
A 1-dimensional (stream-wise) cryogenic hydrogen release model developed previously at Sandia National Laboratories (although this model is not yet validated for cryogenic hydrogen) was exercised to predict that the mean mole fraction at the maximum ignition distance is approximately 0.14, and is not dependent on the release conditions.
What caused the hydrogen release from the reactor?
The hydrogen release rate of 2275.1 mL min−1 g−1 was achieved.
It also shows fair correlation between the thermoactivated hydrogen release spectra and the metal-hydrogen phase diagrams [42-44] [42-44]
With the rise in temperature, significant improvement in hydrogen release is observed at every stage with fast reaction kinetics and faster release of hydrogen.
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