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Materials under Pressure while exposed to brilliant x-ray beams
:: 30 November, 2007
Wendy Mao uses gem-quality diamonds as vise grips to put materials under severe pressure while exposed to brilliant x-ray beams.
In this way she can learn how materials change during extreme conditions, allowing scientists to probe materials near the center of Earth while also looking for new energy-related materials.
"The diamonds are transparent to x-rays, so you can probe the sample at high pressure," said Mao, who is a new assistant professor, jointly appointed in SLAC's Photon Science Department and Stanford's Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences. Mao is also a principal investigator at SLAC's X-Ray Laboratory for Advanced Materials (XLAM).
One of the intriguing materials she studies is a collection of polyhedral ice cages made of water molecules, which are stable when guest molecules occupy the cages. Called clathrates, these full cages occur naturally on the ocean floor and in permafrost regions, where there are low temperatures, high pressures, or both. Clathrates can form in gas pipelines on the ocean floor, causing major economic and safety headaches.
The ice cages can also contain clusters of hydrogen gas molecules (H2), making them a potentially clean and cheap way to store hydrogen for fueling cars in the future. Imagine popping an ice cube into your gas tank. Melting, it releases hydrogen for fuel and leaves only water for exhaust.
Before that day arrives, however, researchers need to figure out how to pack more hydrogen into clathrates and other molecular compounds, as well as how to synthesize and store these materials at more practical conditions. Currently, it takes 2 kilobars, or 2,000 times the pressure on the surface of the Earth, to make hydrogen clathrates. Mao did discover a hydrogen clathrate phase at moderate pressure, but it doesn't store as much hydrogen as desired.
She is also investigating hydrogen-methane compounds, one of which stores over 33 percent H2 by weight—at high pressures and low temperatures. The goal is to understand how H2 is stored in specific structures within compounds. With this knowledge, researchers may be able to engineer chemical pathways that will allow efficient hydrogen storage at practical conditions.
"Our approach is to explore a large range in pressure, temperature and composition in search of material phases with high storage capacity. We then need to find a way to bring these structures close to ambient conditions. Along the way, we also hope to increase our understanding of how molecular hydrogen bonds with potential hosts," Mao said.
Mao's XLAM work is supported by a Department of Energy grant.
In figure, Naturally occurring materials called clathrates can clog offshore gas pipelines, as shown above, but one day researchers may be able to engineer them to store enough hydrogen to fuel cars.
About SLAC
The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) is a United States Department of Energy National Laboratory operated by Stanford University under the programmatic direction of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. The SLAC research program centers on experimental and theoretical research in elementary particle physics using electron beams and a broad program of research in atomic and solid-state physics, chemistry, biology, and medicine using synchrotron radiation. The 3.2-kilometer (2.0-mile) long underground accelerator is the longest linear accelerator in the world, and is claimed to be "the world's straightest object." SLAC's meeting facilities also provided a venue for the homebrew computer club and other pioneers of the 1980s home computer revolution, and later SLAC hosted the first webpage in the U.S. The above-ground klystron gallery atop the beamline is the longest building in the United States.
Tags: Wendy Mao , gem-quality , diamonds , x-ray beams , Earth , SLAC , Photon , XLAM , clathrates , Department of Energy. ,