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Dive into the research topics where Shunsuke Kato is active.

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Featured researches published by Shunsuke Kato.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Low‐Temperature Synthesis of LiBH4 by Gas–Solid Reaction

O. Friedrichs; Andreas Borgschulte; Shunsuke Kato; F. Buchter; Robin Gremaud; Arndt Remhof; Andreas Züttel

The solvent-free synthesis of LiBH(4) from LiH in a borane atmosphere at 120 degrees C and ambient pressures is demonstrated. The source of borane is a milled LiBH(4)/ZnCl(2) mixture, in which Zn(BH(4))(2) is generated by a metathesis reaction. The yield of the reaction of about 74 % LiBH(4) shows that a bulk reaction is taking place upon borane absorption by LiH. This indicates that the formation of B-H bonds is the limiting step for the formation of LiBH(4) from the elements. Therefore, the use of diborane as a starting reactant allows one to circumvent the reaction barrier for the B-B bond dissociation and explains the rather moderate synthesis conditions.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Surface changes on AlH3 during the hydrogen desorption

Shunsuke Kato; Michael Bielmann; Kazutaka Ikeda; Shin-ichi Orimo; Andreas Borgschulte; Andreas Züttel

Surface change of α-AlH3 during the hydrogen desorption was investigated by means of in situ x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy combined with thermal desorption spectroscopy. The surface of AlH3 covered by an oxide layer significantly changes upon hydrogen desorption and the hydrogen desorption rate increases remarkably. In this study, the role of the surface oxide layer on AlH3 in view of the hydrogen desorption kinetics was investigated. AlH3 only decomposes into Al and H2 at the free surface and not in the bulk. Therefore, a closed surface oxide layer prevents the thermodynamically unstable AlH3 from decomposition.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010

Effect of the surface oxidation of LiBH4 on the hydrogen desorption mechanism

Shunsuke Kato; Michael Bielmann; Andreas Borgschulte; Valentina Zakaznova-Herzog; Arndt Remhof; Shin-ichi Orimo; Andreas Züttel

The surface oxidation behavior of LiBH(4) and NaBH(4) was investigated in view of the formation and structure of the surface oxidation and its effect on the hydrogen desorption kinetics. The sample surfaces were intentionally modified by exposure to oxygen in the pressure range from 10(-10) mbar up to 200 mbar. The induced surface changes were systematically studied by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. NaBH(4) shows a low reactivity with oxygen, while LiBH(4) oxidizes rapidly, accompanied by surface segregation of Li. The hydrogen desorption kinetics of LiBH(4) were studied by thermal desorption spectroscopy with particular emphasis on the analysis of the desorbed gases, i.e. diborane and hydrogen. The surface oxidation induces the formation of a Li(2)O layer on LiBH(4), significantly reduces the desorption of diborane, and enhances the rate of hydrogen desorption.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Anharmonicity in LiBH4–LiI induced by anion exchange and temperature

Andreas Borgschulte; Robin Gremaud; Shunsuke Kato; N. P. Stadie; Arndt Remhof; Andreas Züttel; Motoaki Matsuo; Shin-ichi Orimo

The feasibility of spatially resolved Raman spectroscopy probing diffusion multiples as a high-throughput method to study phase transformations in Li-ion conductors is demonstrated. The method is applied to the pseudobinary LiBH4–LiI system, which shows high Li-ion conductivity in the HT-phase of LiBH4. The vibrational properties measured as a function of composition and temperature corroborate the formation of a solid solution of Li(BH4)1−cIc over nearly the entire phase diagram (0<c≤0.8±0.2). The results shed light on anharmonic effects responsible for the structural phase transformation in this system.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Interface reactions and stability of a hydride composite (NaBH4 + MgH2)

Shunsuke Kato; Andreas Borgschulte; Michael Bielmann; Andreas Züttel

The use of the interaction of two hydrides is a well-known concept used to increase the hydrogen equilibrium pressure of composite mixtures in comparison to that of pure systems. The thermodynamics and reaction kinetics of such hydride composites are reviewed and experimentally verified using the example NaBH(4) + MgH(2). Particular emphasis is placed on the measurement of the kinetics and stability using thermodesorption experiments and measurements of pressure-composition isotherms, respectively. The interface reactions in the composite reaction were analysed by in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and by simultaneously probing D(2) desorption from NaBD(4) and H(2) desorption from MgH(2). The observed destabilisation is in quantitative agreement with the calculated thermodynamic properties, including enthalpy and entropy. The results are discussed with respect to kinetic limitations of the hydrogen desorption mechanism at interfaces. General aspects of modifying hydrogen sorption properties via hydride composites are given.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

CO2 hydrogenation on a metal hydride surface

Shunsuke Kato; Andreas Borgschulte; Davide Ferri; Michael Bielmann; Jean-Claude Crivello; Daniel Wiedenmann; Magdalena Parlinska-Wojtan; Peggy Rossbach; Ye Lu; Arndt Remhof; Andreas Züttel

The catalytic hydrogenation of CO(2) at the surface of a metal hydride and the corresponding surface segregation were investigated. The surface processes on Mg(2)NiH(4) were analyzed by in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) combined with thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) and mass spectrometry (MS), and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS). CO(2) hydrogenation on the hydride surface during hydrogen desorption was analyzed by catalytic activity measurement with a flow reactor, a gas chromatograph (GC) and MS. We conclude that for the CO(2) methanation reaction, the dissociation of H(2) molecules at the surface is not the rate controlling step but the dissociative adsorption of CO(2) molecules on the hydride surface.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

The Origin of the Catalytic Activity of a Metal Hydride in CO2 Reduction

Shunsuke Kato; Santhosh Kumar Matam; Philipp Kerger; Laetitia Bernard; Corsin Battaglia; Dirk Vogel; Michael Rohwerder; Andreas Züttel

Atomic hydrogen on the surface of a metal with high hydrogen solubility is of particular interest for the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide. In a mixture of hydrogen and carbon dioxide, methane was markedly formed on the metal hydride ZrCoHx in the course of the hydrogen desorption and not on the pristine intermetallic. The surface analysis was performed by means of time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectroscopy and near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, for the in situ analysis. The aim was to elucidate the origin of the catalytic activity of the metal hydride. Since at the initial stage the dissociation of impinging hydrogen molecules is hindered by a high activation barrier of the oxidised surface, the atomic hydrogen flux from the metal hydride is crucial for the reduction of carbon dioxide and surface oxides at interfacial sites.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Competition between Organics and Bromide at the Aqueous Solution–Air Interface as Seen from Ozone Uptake Kinetics and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Ming-Tao Lee; Matthew A. Brown; Shunsuke Kato; Armin Kleibert; A. Türler; Markus Ammann

A more detailed understanding of the heterogeneous chemistry of halogenated species in the marine boundary layer is required. Here, we studied the reaction of ozone (O3) with NaBr solutions in the presence and absence of citric acid (C6H8O7) under ambient conditions. Citric acid is used as a proxy for oxidized organic material present at the ocean surface or in sea spray aerosol. On neat NaBr solutions, the observed kinetics is consistent with bulk reaction-limited uptake, and a second-order rate constant for the reaction of O3 + Br(-) is 57 ± 10 M(-1) s(-1). On mixed NaBr-citric acid aqueous solutions, the uptake kinetics was faster than that predicted by bulk reaction-limited uptake and also faster than expected based on an acid-catalyzed mechanism. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) on a liquid microjet of the same solutions at 1.0 × 10(-3)-1.0 × 10(-4) mbar was used to obtain quantitative insight into the interfacial composition relative to that of the bulk solutions. It revealed that the bromide anion becomes depleted by 30 ± 10% while the sodium cation gets enhanced by 40 ± 20% at the aqueous solution-air interface of a 0.12 M NaBr solution mixed with 2.5 M citric acid in the bulk, attributed to the role of citric acid as a weak surfactant. Therefore, the enhanced reactivity of bromide solutions observed in the presence of citric acid is not necessarily attributable to a surface reaction but could also result from an increased solubility of ozone at higher citric acid concentrations. Whether the acid-catalyzed chemistry may have a larger effect on the surface than in the bulk to offset the effect of bromide depletion also remains open.


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.


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.

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Andreas Züttel

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Andreas Borgschulte

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Michael Bielmann

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Arndt Remhof

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Elsa Callini

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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Ming-Tao Lee

Paul Scherrer Institute

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Robin Gremaud

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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