Formic acid as a hydrogen source - recent developments and future trends
Formic acid has recently been suggested as a promising hydrogen storage material. The basic concept is briefly discussed and the recent advances in the development of formic acid dehydrogenation catalysts are shown. Both the state of research for heterogeneous and for homogeneous catalyst systems ar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Energy & environmental science 2012, Vol.5 (8), p.8171-8181 |
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creator | Grasemann, Martin Laurenczy, Gábor |
description | Formic acid has recently been suggested as a promising hydrogen storage material. The basic concept is briefly discussed and the recent advances in the development of formic acid dehydrogenation catalysts are shown. Both the state of research for heterogeneous and for homogeneous catalyst systems are reviewed in detail and an outlook on necessary development steps is presented. Formic acid is considered as one of the most promising materials for hydrogen storage today. There are a number of highly active and robust homogeneous catalysts that selectively decompose formic acid to H
2
and CO
2
near to room temperature. Although the activity and selectivity of heterogeneous catalysts have not yet reached the level of homogeneous systems, this gap is closing.
Formic acid is considered as one of the most promising materials for hydrogen storage today for transport/mobile applications. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1039/c2ee21928j |
format | Article |
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2
and CO
2
near to room temperature. Although the activity and selectivity of heterogeneous catalysts have not yet reached the level of homogeneous systems, this gap is closing.
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2
and CO
2
near to room temperature. Although the activity and selectivity of heterogeneous catalysts have not yet reached the level of homogeneous systems, this gap is closing.
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2
and CO
2
near to room temperature. Although the activity and selectivity of heterogeneous catalysts have not yet reached the level of homogeneous systems, this gap is closing.
Formic acid is considered as one of the most promising materials for hydrogen storage today for transport/mobile applications.</abstract><doi>10.1039/c2ee21928j</doi><tpages>11</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
title | Formic acid as a hydrogen source - recent developments and future trends |
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