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Decomposition mechanisms in metal borohydrides and their ammoniates

Abstract

Ammoniation in metal borohydrides (MBs) with the form M\mathcal{M}(BH4_4)x_x has been shown to lower their decomposition temperatures with M\mathcal{M} of low electronegativity (χp1.6\chi_p \lesssim 1.6), but raise it for high-χp\chi_p MBs (χp1.6\chi_p \gtrsim 1.6). Although this behavior is just as desired, an understanding of the mechanisms that cause it is still lacking. Using \emph{ab initio} methods, we elucidate those mechanisms and find that ammoniation always causes thermodynamic destabilization, explaining the observed lower decomposition temperatures for low-χp\chi_p MBs. For high-χp\chi_p MBs, we find that ammoniation blocks B2_2H6_6 formation---the preferred decomposition mechanism in these MBs---and thus kinetically stabilizes those phases. The shift in decomposition pathway that causes the distinct change from destabilization to stabilization around χp=1.6\chi_p=1.6 thus coincides with the onset of B2_2H6_6 formation in MBs. Furthermore, with our analysis we are also able to explain why these materials release either H2_2 or NH3_3 gas upon decomposition. We find that NH3_3 is much more strongly coordinated with higher-χp\chi_p metals and direct H2_2 formation/release becomes more favorable in these materials. Our findings are of importance for unraveling the hydrogen release mechanisms in an important new and promising class of hydrogen storage materials, allowing for a guided tuning of their chemistry to further improve their properties

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