Nanomaterials (Jan 2020)

Polyol Process Coupled to Cold Plasma as a New and Efficient Nanohydride Processing Method: Nano-Ni<sub>2</sub>H as a Case Study

  • Sonia Haj-Khlifa,
  • Sophie Nowak,
  • Patricia Beaunier,
  • Patricia De Rango,
  • Michaël Redolfi,
  • Souad Ammar-Merah

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano10010136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 136

Abstract

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An alternative route for metal hydrogenation has been investigated: cold plasma hydrogen implantation on polyol-made transition metal nanoparticles. This treatment applied to a challenging system, Ni−H, induces a re-ordering of the metal lattice, and superstructure lines have been observed by both Bragg−Brentano and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. The resulting intermetallic structure is similar to those obtained by very high-pressure hydrogenation of nickel and prompt us to suggest that plasma-based hydrogen implantation in nanometals is likely to generate unusual metal hydride, opening new opportunities in chemisorption hydrogen storage. Typically, almost isotropic in shape and about 30 nm sized hexagonal-packed Ni2H single crystals were produced starting from similarly sized cubic face-centred Ni polycrystals.

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