2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2019.09.017
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Hydrogenation of Pd/Mg films: A quantitative assessment of transport coefficients

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…They reported the linear growth constant obtained in the early stages at 200 • C to be equal to κ = 6.6 × 10 −9 cm•s −1 . Measurements in a wide temperature range from RT to 300 • C yield an Arrhenius behaviour with an activation energy E a = 28.1 kJ•mol −1 [159] and comparisons can be found in [160][161][162]. With supplementary investigations and calculations, this low activation energy, the described small grain size of 17 nm and the comparison to theoretical predictions of bulk diffusion led to the conclusion that grain boundary diffusion is the main transport mechanism [159].…”
Section: Pure Metal Hydrides (Mg Pd Ti)mentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…They reported the linear growth constant obtained in the early stages at 200 • C to be equal to κ = 6.6 × 10 −9 cm•s −1 . Measurements in a wide temperature range from RT to 300 • C yield an Arrhenius behaviour with an activation energy E a = 28.1 kJ•mol −1 [159] and comparisons can be found in [160][161][162]. With supplementary investigations and calculations, this low activation energy, the described small grain size of 17 nm and the comparison to theoretical predictions of bulk diffusion led to the conclusion that grain boundary diffusion is the main transport mechanism [159].…”
Section: Pure Metal Hydrides (Mg Pd Ti)mentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Further cycling of their films was not discussed. Hadjixenophontos et al [159] demonstrated, also in thin films, that further de-hydrogenation and re-hydrogenation were possible regardless of the intermetallic reactions at the Mg/Pd interface. The formed phases were detected by TEM micrographs to form a very dense layer close to the surface and consumed the Pd layer over time.…”
Section: Pure Metal Hydrides (Mg Pd Ti)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The possible microscopic origin of the kinetic barrier to boundary migration needs further consideration. In the classical case of intermetallic growth via substitutional interdiffusion, and even in the case of interstitial compounds such as the growth of silicides [10][11][12] and hydrides, [13,14] the existence of a kinetic barrier has been justified by the hindered migration of atoms through the phase boundary. Given the fast growth of the spinel phase beyond the interface, this is probably not the case here, (cf.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extended linear regimes might be seen, if the reaction at the phase boundary requires a major reordering of the atomic arrangement at an interface particularly in the context to fast interstitial diffusion, for instance, with the growth of silicides [10][11][12] and hydrides. [13,14] Such interface-controlled transport results in a slow linear growth of the intermetallic/hydride phase in the initial stages of atomic transport (see ref. [35] ) rather than a faster parabolic growth.…”
Section: Growth Kinetics Of the Rock Salt Phase: A Linear To Parabolic Transitionmentioning
confidence: 99%