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Dive into the research topics where Elsa Callini is active.

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Featured researches published by Elsa Callini.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

Sorption enhanced CO2 methanation

Andreas Borgschulte; Noris Gallandat; Benjamin Probst; Riccardo Suter; Elsa Callini; Davide Ferri; Yadira Arroyo; Rolf Erni; Hans Geerlings; Andreas Züttel

The transformation from the fatuous consumption of fossil energy towards a sustainable energy circle is most easily marketable by not changing the underlying energy carrier but generating it from renewable energy. Hydrocarbons can be principally produced from renewable hydrogen and carbon dioxide collected by biomass. However, research is needed to increase the energetic and economic efficiency of the process. We demonstrate the enhancement of CO2 methanation by sorption enhanced catalysis. The preparation and catalytic activity of sorption catalysts based on Ni particles in zeolites is reported. The functioning of the sorption catalysis is discussed together with the determination of the reaction mechanism, providing implications for new ways in catalysis.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Probing hydrogen spillover in Pd@MIL-101(Cr) with a focus on hydrogen chemisorption

Petra Á. Szilágyi; Elsa Callini; A. Anastasopol; C. Kwakernaak; Sumit Sachdeva; R. van de Krol; Hans Geerlings; A. Borgschulte; Andreas Züttel; Bernard Dam

Palladium nanoparticles can split the dihydrogen bond and produce atomic hydrogen. When the metal nanoparticles are in intimate contact with a hydrogen-atom host, chemisorption of H-atoms by the host has been suggested to occur via the hydrogen spillover mechanism. Metal-organic frameworks were predicted to be able to act as effective chemisorption sites, and increased ambient-temperature hydrogen adsorption was reported on several occasions. The intimate contact was supposedly ensured by the use of a carbon bridge. In this work, we show that it is possible to introduce catalyst palladium particles into MOFs pores and simultaneously ensuring good contact, making the employment of the carbon bridge redundant. The addition of Pd nanoparticles indeed increases the ambient-temperature hydrogen uptake of the framework, but this is found to be solely due to palladium hydride formation. In addition, we show that the hydrogen atoms do not chemisorb on the host framework, which excludes the possibility of hydrogen spillover.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Supercritical N2 processing as a route to the clean dehydrogenation of porous Mg(BH4)2.

Nicholas P. Stadie; Elsa Callini; Bo Richter; Torben R. Jensen; Andreas Borgschulte; Andreas Züttel

Compounds of interest for chemical hydrogen storage at near ambient conditions are specifically tailored to be relatively unstable and thereby desorb H2 upon heating. Their decomposition must be performed in the absence of impurities to achieve clean dehydrogenation products, which is particularly challenging for an emerging class of microporous complex hydride materials, such as γ-phase Mg(BH4)2, which exhibits high surface area and readily adsorbs (sometimes undesired) molecular species. We present a novel strategy toward the purification of γ-Mg(BH4)2 using supercritical nitrogen drying techniques, (1) showing that clean hydrogen can be released from Mg(BH4)2 under mild conditions and (2) clarifying the origin of diborane among the decomposition products of stable borohydrides, a topic of critical importance for the reversibility and practical applicability of this class of hydrogen storage compounds. This technique is also widely applicable in the pursuit of the high-purity synthesis of other porous, reactive compounds, an exciting future class of advanced functional materials.


Chimia | 2015

Storage of Renewable Energy by Reduction of CO2 with Hydrogen.

Andreas Züttel; Philippe Mauron; Shunsuke Kato; Elsa Callini; Marco Holzer; Jianmei Huang

The main difference between the past energy economy during the industrialization period which was mainly based on mining of fossil fuels, e.g. coal, oil and methane and the future energy economy based on renewable energy is the requirement for storage of the energy fluxes. Renewable energy, except biomass, appears in time- and location-dependent energy fluxes as heat or electricity upon conversion. Storage and transport of energy requires a high energy density and has to be realized in a closed materials cycle. The hydrogen cycle, i.e. production of hydrogen from water by renewable energy, storage and use of hydrogen in fuel cells, combustion engines or turbines, is a closed cycle. However, the hydrogen density in a storage system is limited to 20 mass% and 150 kg/m(3) which limits the energy density to about half of the energy density in fossil fuels. Introducing CO(2) into the cycle and storing hydrogen by the reduction of CO(2) to hydrocarbons allows renewable energy to be converted into synthetic fuels with the same energy density as fossil fuels. The resulting cycle is a closed cycle (CO(2) neutral) if CO(2) is extracted from the atmosphere. Todays technology allows CO(2) to be reduced either by the Sabatier reaction to methane, by the reversed water gas shift reaction to CO and further reduction of CO by the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) to hydrocarbons or over methanol to gasoline. The overall process can only be realized on a very large scale, because the large number of by-products of FTS requires the use of a refinery. Therefore, a well-controlled reaction to a specific product is required for the efficient conversion of renewable energy (electricity) into an easy to store liquid hydrocarbon (fuel). In order to realize a closed hydrocarbon cycle the two major challenges are to extract CO(2) from the atmosphere close to the thermodynamic limit and to reduce CO(2) with hydrogen in a controlled reaction to a specific hydrocarbon. Nanomaterials with nanopores and the unique surface structures of metallic clusters offer new opportunities for the production of synthetic fuels.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2015

Manipulating the reaction path of the CO2 hydrogenation reaction in molecular sieves

Andreas Borgschulte; Elsa Callini; N. P. Stadie; Yadira Arroyo; Marta D. Rossell; Rolf Erni; Hans Geerlings; Andreas Züttel; Davide Ferri

We demonstrate that the kinetics of the Sabatier reaction catalysed by sorption catalysts depends on the nanostructure of the catalyst–sorbent system. The catalysts are prepared by ion exchange of a nickel nitrate solution in two zeolites with different pore sizes. Besides their different pore sizes — which enables or hinders the adsorption of the reactants, intermediates and products in the inner of the crystallites — the catalyst systems have slightly different size distributions of the Ni-particles. By studying various catalysts with different Ni-contents we can attribute different catalytic activity and in particular the shape selectivity of the zeolite support. Therefore we focus on the microstructural characterization of the catalyst. We observe that the selectivity for methane is greatly enhanced if the pore size of the support is larger than 5 A, while pore sizes of less than 3 A reduce the overall conversion rate and the selectivity for methane. Thus, Ni on 3A zeolites can be used as low temperature catalysts for the reversed water-gas shift reaction to produce carbon monoxide.


RSC Advances | 2014

Dehydrogenation studies of the bimetallic borohydrides

M. Chong; Elsa Callini; Andreas Borgschulte; Andreas Züttel; C. M. Jensen

One of the major issues associated with the use of borohydride complexes for hydrogen storage is the thermodynamic stability of these materials, with the Group I and II complexes also requiring the most demanding temperatures to facilitate dehydrogenation. In recent years, the idea of modulating thermodynamic properties by combining metals with different stabilities (as monocation borohydrides) has come to light. By incorporating a cation with ionic bonding characteristics, it has been proposed that the volatile Sc borohydrides can be stabilized to an extent that diborane release is prevented. We show, using in situ IR and TG analysis, that these complexes do indeed release significant quantities of diborane, which is an irrevocable barrier to reversibility. Our findings suggest that the Group I/Sc bimetallic borohydrides are not suitable for hydrogen storage.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Supercritical nitrogen processing for the purification of reactive porous materials.

Nicholas P. Stadie; Elsa Callini; Philippe Mauron; Andreas Borgschulte; Andreas Züttel

Supercritical fluid extraction and drying methods are well established in numerous applications for the synthesis and processing of porous materials. Herein, nitrogen is presented as a novel supercritical drying fluid for specialized applications such as in the processing of reactive porous materials, where carbon dioxide and other fluids are not appropriate due to their higher chemical reactivity. Nitrogen exhibits similar physical properties in the near-critical region of its phase diagram as compared to carbon dioxide: a widely tunable density up to ~1 g ml(-1), modest critical pressure (3.4 MPa), and small molecular diameter of ~3.6 Å. The key to achieving a high solvation power of nitrogen is to apply a processing temperature in the range of 80-150 K, where the density of nitrogen is an order of magnitude higher than at similar pressures near ambient temperature. The detailed solvation properties of nitrogen, and especially its selectivity, across a wide range of common target species of extraction still require further investigation. Herein we describe a protocol for the supercritical nitrogen processing of porous magnesium borohydride.


Chimia | 2015

Surface Reactions are Crucial for Energy Storage.

Elsa Callini; Shunsuke Kato; Philippe Mauron; Andreas Züttel

Reactions between gas molecules, e.g. H2 and CO2 and solids take place at the surface. The electronic states and the local geometry of the atomic arrangement determine the energy of the adsorbate, i.e. the initial molecule and the transition state. Here we review our research to identify the surface species, their chemical state and orientation, the interaction with the neighbouring molecules and the mobility of the adsorbed species and complement the experimental results with thermodynamic modelling. The role of the Ti was found to be a bridge between the charged species preventing the individual movement of the ions including charge separation. The Ti has no catalytic effect on the hydrogen sorption reaction in borohydrides. The physisorption of molecular hydrogen is too weak at ambient temperature to reach a significant hydrogen storage density. The addition of a hydrogen dissociation catalyst to a nanoporous material with a large specific surface area may potentially enable the spillover of hydrogen atoms from the metal catalyst to the surface of the porous material and chemisorb on specific sites with a much higher binding energy compared to physisorption. The intercalation of alkali metals in C60 fullerenes increases the interaction energy of hydrogen with the so-called metal fullerides significantly. Sterical diffusion barriers by partial oxidation of the surface of borohydrides turned out to redirect the reaction path towards pure hydrogen desorption and suppress the formation of diborane, a by-product of the hydrogen evolution reaction from borohydrides previously undetected. The combination of a newly developed gas controlling system with microreactors allows us to investigate complex reactions with small quantities of nano designed new catalytic materials. Furthermore, tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) will allow the investigation of the reactions locally on the surface of the catalyst and the near ambient pressure photoelectron spectroscopy enables analysis of the surfaces in ultra-high vacuum and in situ interaction with the adsorbates i.e. while the reaction takes place. This brings us in a unique position for the investigation of the heterogeneous reactive systems. The mechanism of the Ti catalysed hydrogen sorption reactions in alanates was recently established based on spectroscopic investigations combined with thermodynamic analysis of the transition states.


Chimia | 2015

Storing Renewable Energy in the Hydrogen Cycle

Andreas Züttel; Elsa Callini; Shunsuke Kato; Züleyha Özlem Kocabas Atakli

An energy economy based on renewable energy requires massive energy storage, approx. half of the annual energy consumption. Therefore, the production of a synthetic energy carrier, e.g. hydrogen, is necessary. The hydrogen cycle, i.e. production of hydrogen from water by renewable energy, storage and use of hydrogen in fuel cells, combustion engines or turbines is a closed cycle. Electrolysis splits water into hydrogen and oxygen and represents a mature technology in the power range up to 100 kW. However, the major technological challenge is to build electrolyzers in the power range of several MW producing high purity hydrogen with a high efficiency. After the production of hydrogen, large scale and safe hydrogen storage is required. Hydrogen is stored either as a molecule or as an atom in the case of hydrides. The maximum volumetric hydrogen density of a molecular hydrogen storage is limited to the density of liquid hydrogen. In a complex hydride the hydrogen density is limited to 20 mass% and 150 kg/m(3) which corresponds to twice the density of liquid hydrogen. Current research focuses on the investigation of new storage materials based on combinations of complex hydrides with amides and the understanding of the hydrogen sorption mechanism in order to better control the reaction for the hydrogen storage applications.


International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2016

Nanostructured materials for solid-state hydrogen storage: A review of the achievement of COST Action MP1103

Elsa Callini; Kondo-Francois Aguey-Zinsou; Rajeev Ahuja; J.R. Ares; Sara Bals; Nikola Biliškov; Sudip Chakraborty; Georgia Charalambopoulou; Anna-Lisa Chaudhary; F. Cuevas; Bernard Dam; Petra E. de Jongh; Martin Dornheim; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Jasmina Grbović Novaković; Michael Hirscher; Torben R. Jensen; Peter Bjerre Jensen; Nikola Novaković; Qiwen Lai; F. Leardini; Daniele Mirabile Gattia; Luca Pasquini; Theodore Steriotis; Stuart Turner; Tejs Vegge; Andreas Züttel; Amelia Montone

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Andreas Züttel

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Andreas Borgschulte

United States Department of Energy

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Shunsuke Kato

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Philippe Mauron

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Andreas Zuettel

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Hans Geerlings

Delft University of Technology

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Davide Ferri

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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