Creation of New Metal Nanoparticles and Their Hydrogen-Storage and Catalytic Properties

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This thesis reports the discovery of metal nanoparticles having new structures that do not exist in bulk state and that exhibit hydrogen storage ability or CO oxidation activity. Research into the reaction of hydrogen with metals has attracted much attention because of potential applications as effective hydrogen storage materials, as permeable films, or as catalysts for hydrogenation. Also, CO oxidation catalysts have been extensively developed because of their importance to CO removal from car exhaust or fuel-cell systems. At the same time, atomic-level (solid solution) alloying has the advantage of being able to continuously control chemical and physical properties of elements by changing compositions and/or combinations of constituent elements. This thesis provides a novel strategy for the basis of inter-elemental fusion to create highly efficient functional materials for energy and material conversions.

Author(s): Kohei Kusada (auth.)
Series: Springer Theses
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer Japan
Year: 2014

Language: English
Pages: 78
Tags: Catalysis; Nanotechnology; Energy Storage

Front Matter....Pages i-xii
General Introduction....Pages 1-16
Hydrogen Storage Properties of Solid Solution Alloys of Immiscible Neighboring Elements with Pd....Pages 17-27
Systematic Study of the Hydrogen Storage Properties and the CO-oxidizing Abilities of Solid Solution Alloy Nanoparticles in an Immiscible Pd–Ru System....Pages 29-57
Discovery of the Face-Centered Cubic Ruthenium Nanoparticles: Facile Size-Controlled Synthesis Using the Chemical Reduction Method....Pages 59-67
Changeover of the Thermodynamic Behavior for Hydrogen Storage in Rh with Increasing Nanoparticle Size....Pages 69-76
Back Matter....Pages 77-78