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Dive into the research topics where Lars H. Jepsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Lars H. Jepsen.


Chemsuschem | 2015

Tailoring the properties of ammine metal borohydrides for solid-state hydrogen storage

Lars H. Jepsen; Morten B. Ley; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Flemming Besenbacher; Torben R. Jensen

A series of halide-free ammine manganese borohydrides, Mn(BH4 )2 ⋅nNH3 , n=1, 2, 3, and 6, a new bimetallic compound Li2 Mn(BH4 )4 ⋅6NH3 , and the first ammine metal borohydride solid solution Mg1-x Mnx (BH4 )2 ⋅6NH3 are presented. Four new crystal structures have been determined by synchrotron radiation powder X-ray diffraction and the thermal decomposition is systematically investigated for all the new compounds. The solid-gas reaction between Mn(BH4 )2 and NH3 provides Mn(BH4 )2 ⋅6NH3 . The number of NH3 per Mn has been varied by mechanochemical treatment of Mn(BH4 )2 ⋅6NH3 -Mn(BH4 )2 mixtures giving rise to increased hydrogen purity for n/m≤1 for M(BH4 )m ⋅nNH3 . The structures of Mg(BH4 )2 ⋅3NH3 and Li2 Mg(BH4 )4 ⋅6NH3 have been revisited and new structural models are presented. Finally, we demonstrate that ammonia destabilizes metal borohydrides with low electronegativity of the metal (χp <∼1.6), while metal borohydrides with high electronegativity (χp >∼1.6) are generally stabilized.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Trends in Syntheses, Structures, and Properties for Three Series of Ammine Rare-Earth Metal Borohydrides, M(BH4)3·nNH3 (M = Y, Gd, and Dy)

Lars H. Jepsen; Morten B. Ley; Radovan Černý; Young-Su Lee; Young Whan Cho; Dorthe Bomholdt Ravnsbæk; Flemming Besenbacher; Jørgen Skibsted; Torben R. Jensen

Fourteen solvent- and halide-free ammine rare-earth metal borohydrides M(BH4)3·nNH3, M = Y, Gd, Dy, n = 7, 6, 5, 4, 2, and 1, have been synthesized by a new approach, and their structures as well as chemical and physical properties are characterized. Extensive series of coordination complexes with systematic variation in the number of ligands are presented, as prepared by combined mechanochemistry, solvent-based methods, solid-gas reactions, and thermal treatment. This new synthesis approach may have a significant impact within inorganic coordination chemistry. Halide-free metal borohydrides have been synthesized by solvent-based metathesis reactions of LiBH4 and MCl3 (3:1), followed by reactions of M(BH4)3 with an excess of NH3 gas, yielding M(BH4)3·7NH3 (M = Y, Gd, and Dy). Crystal structure models for M(BH4)3·nNH3 are derived from a combination of powder X-ray diffraction (PXD), (11)B magic-angle spinning NMR, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The structures vary from two-dimensional layers (n = 1), one-dimensional chains (n = 2), molecular compounds (n = 4 and 5), to contain complex ions (n = 6 and 7). NH3 coordinates to the metal in all compounds, while BH4(-) has a flexible coordination, i.e., either as a terminal or bridging ligand or as a counterion. M(BH4)3·7NH3 releases ammonia stepwise by thermal treatment producing M(BH4)3·nNH3 (6, 5, and 4), whereas hydrogen is released for n ≤ 4. Detailed analysis of the dihydrogen bonds reveals new insight about the hydrogen elimination mechanism, which contradicts current hypotheses. Overall, the present work provides new general knowledge toward rational materials design and preparation along with limitations of PXD and DFT for analysis of structures with a significant degree of dynamics in the structures.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

A Composite of Complex and Chemical Hydrides Yields the First Al‐Based Amidoborane with Improved Hydrogen Storage Properties

Iurii Dovgaliuk; Lars H. Jepsen; Damir A. Safin; Zbigniew Łodziana; Vadim Dyadkin; Torben R. Jensen; Michel Devillers; Yaroslav Filinchuk

The first Al-based amidoborane Na[Al(NH2 BH3 )4 ] was obtained through a mechanochemical treatment of the NaAlH4 -4 AB (AB=NH3 BH3 ) composite releasing 4.5 wt % of pure hydrogen. The same amidoborane was also produced upon heating the composite at 70 °C. The crystal structure of Na[Al(NH2 BH3 )4 ], elucidated from synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction and confirmed by DFT calculations, contains the previously unknown tetrahedral ion [Al(NH2 BH3 )4 ](-) , with every NH2 BH3 (-) ligand coordinated to aluminum through nitrogen atoms. Combination of complex and chemical hydrides in the same compound was possible due to both the lower stability of the AlH bonds compared to the BH ones in borohydride, and due to the strong Lewis acidity of Al(3+) . According to the thermogravimetric analysis-differential scanning calorimetry-mass spectrometry (TGA-DSC-MS) studies, Na[Al(NH2 BH3 )4 ] releases in two steps 9 wt % of pure hydrogen. As a result of this decomposition, which was also supported by volumetric studies, the formation of NaBH4 and amorphous product(s) of the surmised composition AlN4 B3 H(0-3.6) were observed. Furthermore, volumetric experiments have also shown that the final residue can reversibly absorb about 27 % of the released hydrogen at 250 °C and p(H2 )=150 bar. Hydrogen re-absorption does not regenerate neither Na[Al(NH2 BH3 )4 ] nor starting materials, NaAlH4 and AB, but rather occurs within amorphous product(s). Detailed studies of the latter one(s) can open an avenue for a new family of reversible hydrogen storage materials. Finally, the NaAlH4 -4 AB composite might become a starting point towards a new series of aluminum-based tetraamidoboranes with improved hydrogen storage properties such as hydrogen storage density, hydrogen purity, and reversibility.


Chemsuschem | 2015

Ammine Calcium and Strontium Borohydrides: Syntheses, Structures, and Properties

Lars H. Jepsen; Young-Su Lee; Radovan Černý; Ram S. Sarusie; Young Whan Cho; Flemming Besenbacher; Torben R. Jensen

A new series of solvent- and halide-free ammine strontium metal borohydrides Sr(NH3 )n (BH4 )2 (n=1, 2, and 4) and further investigations of Ca(NH3 )n (BH4 )2 (n=1, 2, 4, and 6) are presented. Crystal structures have been determined by powder XRD and optimized by DFT calculations to evaluate the strength of the dihydrogen bonds. Sr(NH3 )(BH4 )2 (Pbcn) and Sr(NH3 )2 (BH4 )2 (Pnc2) are layered structures, whereas M(NH3 )4 (BH4 )2 (M=Ca and Sr; P21 /c) are molecular structures connected by dihydrogen bonds. Both series of compounds release NH3 gas upon thermal treatment if the partial pressure of ammonia is low. Therefore, the strength of the dihydrogen bonds, the structure of the compounds, and the NH3 /BH4 (-) ratio for M(NH3 )n (BH4 )m have little influence on the composition of the released gasses. The composition of the released gas depends mainly on the thermal stability of the ammine metal borohydride and the corresponding metal borohydride.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

New directions for hydrogen storage: Sulphur destabilised sodium aluminium hydride

Drew A. Sheppard; Lars H. Jepsen; Torben R. Jensen; Mark Paskevicius; Craig E. Buckley

Aluminium sulphide (Al2S3) is predicted to effectively destabilise sodium aluminium hydride (NaAlH4) in a single-step endothermic hydrogen release reaction. The experimental results show unexpectedly complex desorption processes and a range of new sulphur containing hydrogen storage materials have been observed. The NaAlH4–Al2S3 system releases a total of 4.9 wt% of H2 that begins below 100 °C without the need for a catalyst. Characterisation via temperature programmed desorption, in situ synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction, ex situ x-ray diffraction, ex situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and hydrogen sorption measurements reveal complex decomposition processes that involve multiple new sulphur-containing hydride compounds. The system shows partial H2 reversibility, without the need for a catalyst, with a stable H2 capacity of ∼1.6 wt% over 15 cycles in the temperature range of 200 °C to 300 °C. This absorption capacity is limited by the need for high H2 pressures (>280 bar) to drive the absorption process at the high temperatures required for reasonable absorption kinetics. The large number of new phases discovered in this system suggests that destabilisation of complex hydrides with metal sulphides is a novel but unexplored research avenue for hydrogen storage materials.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Thermal decomposition of sodium amide, NaNH2, and sodium amide hydroxide composites, NaNH2-NaOH.

Lars H. Jepsen; Peikun Wang; Guotao Wu; Zhitao Xiong; Flemming Besenbacher; Ping Chen; Torben R. Jensen

Sodium amide, NaNH2, has recently been shown to be a useful catalyst to decompose NH3 into H2 and N2, however, sodium hydroxide is omnipresent and commercially available NaNH2 usually contains impurities of NaOH (<2%). The thermal decomposition of NaNH2 and NaNH2-NaOH composites is systematically investigated and discussed. NaNH2 is partially dissolved in NaOH at T > 100 °C, forming a non-stoichiometric solid solution of Na(OH)1-x(NH2)x (0 < x < ∼0.30), which crystallizes in an orthorhombic unit cell with the space group P212121 determined by synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. The composite xNaNH2-(1 - x)NaOH (∼0.70 < x < 0.72) shows a lowered melting point, ∼160 °C, compared to 200 and 318 °C for neat NaNH2 and NaOH, respectively. We report that 0.36 mol of NH3 per mol of NaNH2 is released below 400 °C during heating in an argon atmosphere, initiated at its melting point, T = 200 °C, possibly due to the formation of the mixed sodium amide imide solid solution. Furthermore, NaOH reacts with NaNH2 at elevated temperatures and provides the release of additional NH3.


Materials Today | 2014

Complex hydrides for hydrogen storage – new perspectives

Morten B. Ley; Lars H. Jepsen; Young-Su Lee; Young Whan Cho; José M. Bellosta von Colbe; Martin Dornheim; Masoud Rokni; Jens Oluf Jensen; Mikael Sloth; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Jens Erik Jørgensen; Flemming Besenbacher; Torben R. Jensen


Materials Today | 2014

Boron–nitrogen based hydrides and reactive composites for hydrogen storage

Lars H. Jepsen; Morten B. Ley; Young-Su Lee; Young Whan Cho; Martin Dornheim; Jens Oluf Jensen; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Jens Erik Jørgensen; Flemming Besenbacher; Torben R. Jensen


Chemical Society Reviews | 2017

Metal borohydrides and derivatives – synthesis, structure and properties

Mark Paskevicius; Lars H. Jepsen; Pascal Schouwink; Radovan Černý; Dorthe Bomholdt Ravnsbæk; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Martin Dornheim; Flemming Besenbacher; Torben R. Jensen


The Journal of Physical Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis, crystal structure, thermal decomposition, and 11B MAS NMR characterization of Mg(BH4)2(NH3BH 3)2

Lars H. Jepsen; Voraksmy Ban; Kasper T. Møller; Young-Su Lee; Young Whan Cho; Flemming Besenbacher; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Jørgen Skibsted; Torben R. Jensen

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Yaroslav Filinchuk

Université catholique de Louvain

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Young Whan Cho

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Young-Su Lee

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Iurii Dovgaliuk

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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