Skip to main content

2005 Annual Merit Review Proceedings

Hydrogen Storage

Below are presentations and posters from the hydrogen storage session at the 2005 Annual Merit Review held May 23-26, 2005 in Arlington, Virginia.

Hydrogen Storage Presentations

A. Compressed/Liquid H2 Tanks
B. Chemical Hydrides
C. Metal Hydrides
D. Testing and Analysis
E. New Materials and Concepts

Hydrogen Storage, Sunita Satyapal, DOE (PDF 1.07 MB)

A. Compressed/Liquid H2 Tanks

  1. Low Cost, High Efficiency, High Pressure Hydrogen Storage (PDF 604 KB), Jui Ko, Quantum
  2. Advanced Concepts for Containment of Hydrogen and Hydrogen Storage Materials (PDF 1.26 MB), Salvador Aceves, LLNL

B. Chemical Hydrides

  1. Center of Excellence for Chemical Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.52 MB), Bill Tumas, LANL
  2. Process for the Regeneration of Sodium Borate to Sodium Borohydride for Use as a Hydrogen Storage Source (PDF 390 KB), Ying Wu, Millennium Cell
  3. Chemical Hydride Slurry for Hydrogen Production and Storage (PDF 532 KB), Andy McClaine, Safe Hydrogen
  4. Development of New Carbon-Based Sorbent Systems for an Effective Containment of Hydrogen (PDF 381 KB), Alan Cooper, Air Products and Chemicals

C. Metal Hydrides

  1. Development of Metal Hydrides at Sandia National Laboratories (PDF 2.48 MB), Jim Wang, SNL
  2. Catalytically Enhanced Hydrogen Storage Systems (PDF 1.39 MB), Craig Jensen, University of Hawaii
  3. High Density Hydrogen Storage System Demonstration Using NaAlH4 Complex Compound Hydrides (PDF 1.67 MB), Don Anton, UTRC
  4. Discovery of Novel Complex Metal Hydrides for Hydrogen Storage through Molecular Modeling and Combinatorial Methods (PDF 1 MB), Adriaan Sachtler, UOP
  5. Complex Hydride Compounds with Enhanced Hydrogen Storage Capacity (PDF 1.39 MB), Susanne Opalka, UTRC

D. Testing and Analysis

  1. Analyses of Hydrogen Storage Materials and On-Board Systems (PDF 765 KB), Stephen Lasher, TIAX LLC
  2. System Level Analysis of Hydrogen Storage Options (PDF 408 KB), Rajesh Ahluwalia, ANL
  3. Standardized Testing Program for Chemical Hydride and Carbon Storage Technologies (PDF 870 KB), Richard Page, SwRI

E. New Materials and Concepts

  1. Sub-Nanostructured Non-Transition Metal Complex Grids for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 2.1 MB), Orhan Talu, Cleveland State University
  2. A Synergistic Approach to the Development of New Hydrogen Storage Materials (PDF 2.9 MB), Samuel Mao, University of South California
  3. Clean Energy Research at the University of South Carolina (PDF 811 KB), Ralph White, University of South Carolina
  4. Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Research University of South Florida (PDF 1.03 MB), Lee Stefanakos, University of South Florida
  5. Advanced Manufacturing Technologies for Renewable Energy Applications (PDF 420 KB), Chuck Ryan, National Center for Manfucturing Sciences

Back to Top

Hydrogen Storage Posters

A. Compressed/Liquid H2 Tanks
B. Chemical Hydrides
C. Metal Hydrides
D. Carbon Materials
E. New Materials and Concepts

A. Compressed/Liquid H2 Tanks

  1. Underground LH2 Off-Board Hydrogen Storage Technology (PDF 753 KB), Mark Richards, GTI

B. Chemical Hydrides

  1. Center of Excellence for Chemical Hydrogen Storage: PNNL Tasks and Collaborations (PDF 3.17 MB), Chris Aardahl, PNNL
  2. Electrochemical Hydrogen Storage Systems (PDF 211 KB), Digby MacDonald, Pennsylvania State University
  3. Main Group Element Chemistry for Hydrogen Storage and Activation (PDF 534 KB), Anthony Arduengo, University of Alabama
  4. Chemical Hydrogen Storage Using Ultra-High Surface Area Main Group Elements (PDF 847 KB), Philip Powers, University of California - Davis
  5. Chemical Hydrogen Storage Using Polyhedral Borane Anion Salts (PDF 244 KB), Fred Hawthorne, University of California - Los Angeles
  6. Amineborane Hydrogen Storage (PDF 430 KB), Larry Sneddon, University of Pennsylvania
  7. Kinetic and Mechanistic Studies of B-N Hydrogenation/Dehydrogenation (PDF 189 KB), Mike Heinekey, University of Washington
  8. Development of Advanced Chemical Hydrogen Storage and Generation System (PDF 1.4 MB), Ying Wu, Millennium Cell
  9. Novel Approaches to Hydrogen Storage: Conversion of Borates to Boron Hydrides (PDF 432 KB), Susan Linehan, Rohm and Haas
  10. Combinatorial Synthesis and High Throughput Screening of Effective Catalysts for Chemical Hydrides (PDF 932 KB), Xiao-Dong Xiang, Intematix Corp.
  11. Safety Analysis and Applied Research on the Use of Borane-Amines for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 153 KB), Clinton Lane, North Arizona University
  12. Center of Excellence for Chemical Hydrogen Storage: LANL Tasks and Collaborations (PDF 1.52 MB), Bill Tumas, LANL
  13. Center of Excellence for Chemical Hydrogen Storage: LANL Tasks and Collaborations (PDF 360 KB), Bill Tumas, LANL

C. Metal Hydrides

  1. DOE Metal Hydride Center of Excellence (MHCoE) (PDF 5.3 MB), James Wang, SNL
  2. Synthesis and Properties of Aluminum Hydride as a Hydrogen Storage Material (PDF 766 KB), Jim Wegrzyn, BNL
  3. Development and Evaluation of Advanced Hydride Systems for Reversible Hydrogen Storage (PDF 877 KB), Robert Bowman, Jet Propulsion Lab
  4. Neutron Scattering Characterization and Thermodynamic Modeling of Advanced Metal Hydrides for Reversible Hydrogen Storage (PDF 645 KB), Terry Udovic, NIST
  5. Novel Synthetic Approaches for the Preparation of Complex Hydrides for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 298 KB), Gilbert Brown, ONRL
  6. Development of Reversible Hydrogen Storage Alane (PDF 572 KB), Ragaiy Zidan, Savannah River NL
  7. Synthesis of Nanophase Materials for Thermodynamically Tuned Reversible Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.65 MB), Channing Ahn, California Institute of Technology
  8. Thermodynamically Tuned Nanophase Materials for Reversible Hydrogen Storage: Structure and Kinetics of Nanoparticle and Model System Materials (PDF 1.23 MB), Bruce Clemens, Stanford University
  9. Reversible Hydrogen Storage Materials - Structure, Chemistry and Electronic Structure (PDF 2.08 MB), Ian Robertson, University of Illinois
  10. Effect of Gaseous Impurities on Long-Term Thermal Cycling and Aging Properties of Complex Hydrides for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 352 KB), Dhanesh Chandra, University of Nevada - Reno
  11. First-Principles Modeling of Hydrogen Storage in Metal Hydride Systems (PDF 1 MB), Karl Johnson, University of Pittsburgh
  12. Synthesis and Discovery of Nanocrystalline Reversible Hydrides by Vapor Phase Reactions (PDF 704 KB), Zak Fang, University of Utah
  13. Lightweight Intermetallics for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 735 KB), J.-C. Zhao, GE
  14. Thermodynamically Tuned Nanophase Materials (PDF 385 KB), Greg Olsen, Hughes Research Labs
  15. High Throughput Combinatorial Chemistry Development of Complex Metal Hydrides (PDF 888 KB), Xiao-Dong Xiang, Intematix Corp.
  16. Clean Energy Research Project III: Hydrogen Storage Using Chemical Hydrides (PDF 842 KB), Michael Matthews, University of South Carolina
  17. Development and Characterization of Novel Complex Hydrides (PDF 460 KB), Ragaiy Zidan, Savannah River NL
  18. Fundamental Studies of Advanced High-Capacity, Reversible Metal Hydrides (PDF 366 KB), Craig Jensen, University of Hawaii
  19. Development of Metal Hydrides at Sandia National Laboratories (PDF 1.78 MB), Jim Wang, SNL

D. Carbon Materials

  1. Metal-doped Carbon Aerogels for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 920 KB), Joe Satcher, LLNL
  2. Synthesis and Processing of Single-Walled Carbon Nanohorns for Hydrogen Storage and Catalyst Supports (PDF 2.83 MB), David Geohegan, ORNL
  3. Neutron Characterization of Carbon-Based Materials (PDF 1.91 MB), Dan Neumann, NIST
  4. Enhanced Hydrogen Dipole Physisorption (PDF 587 KB), Channing Ahn, California Institute of Technology
  5. Controlling the Diameter of Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.63 MB), Jie Liu, Duke University
  6. Study of Hydrogen Storage in Advanced Boron and Metal Loaded High Porosity Carbons (PDF 554 KB), Peter Eklund, Pennsylvania State University
  7. Cloning Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.7 MB), Richard Smalley, Rice University
  8. Optimization of SWNT Production and Theoretical Models of H2-SWNT Systems for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 937 KB), Boris Yakobson, Rice University
  9. Examination of the Physical Aspects of Hydrogen Storage in MOFs (PDF 1.94 MB), Omar Yaghi, University of Michigan
  10. Hydrogen Storage in Graphite Nanofibers and the Spillover Mechanism (PDF 229 KB), Ralph Yang, University of Michigan
  11. Characterization of Hydrogen Adsorption by NMR (PDF 548 KB), Yue Wu, University of North Carolina
  12. Conducting Polymers as New Materials for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.35 MB), Alan MacDiarmid, University of Pennsylvania
  13. Designing Microporous Carbons for Hydrogen Storage Systems (PDF 1.16 MB), Guido Pez, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.
  14. Carbide-Derived Carbons with Tunable Porosity Optimized for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 363 KB), Yury Gogotsi, University of Pennsylvania
  15. Electron-Charged Graphite-Based Hydrogen Storage Material (PDF 998 KB), Chinbay Fan, GTI
  16. Nanostructured Activated Carbon for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 989 KB), Israel Cabasso, SUNY - Syracuse
  17. NREL Activities in DOE Carbon-based Materials Center of Excellence (PDF 1.26 MB), Mike Heben, NREL

E. New Materials and Concepts

  1. Next Generation Hydrogen Storage Containers (PDF 1.45 MB), Andrew Weisberg, LLNL
  2. Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Research (PDF 1.54 MB), Lee Stefanakos, University of South Florida
  3. Development of Regenerable, High-Capacity Boron Nitrogen Hydrides for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 383 KB), Ashok Damle, Research Triangle Institute
  4. Glass Microspheres for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 298 KB), Matt Hall, Alfred University
  5. Glass Microspheres for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.5 MB), Viktor Struzhkin, Carnegie Institute
  6. Metal Perhydrides for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 153 KB), Jim Hwang, Michigan Technological University
  7. Hydrogen Storage Materials with Binding Intermediate Between Chemisorption and Physisorption (PDF 1.33 MB), Juergen Eckert, University of California - Santa Barbara
  8. Lithium Nitride-Based Materials for Hydrogen Storage (PDF 1.53 MB), Leon Shaw, University of Connecticut
  9. New Concepts for Optimized Hydrogen Storage in MOFs (PDF 1.85 MB), Omar Yaghi, University of Michigan
  10. Hydrogen Storage in Novel Organic Clathrates (PDF 527 KB), Jerry Atwood, University of Missouri - St. Louis
  11. Hydrogen Absorption on Irradiated Carbon and Other Materials (PDF 67 KB), Luis Muga, TOFTEC, Inc.
  12. Development of Complex Metal Hydride Hydrogen Storage Materials (PDF 725 KB), Ritter, University of South Carolina

Back to Top

To locate posters and presentations from other meeting sessions, go to the main page of the 2005 Annual Merit Review Proceedings.