Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

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Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials. / Stock, Sebastian; Trost, Claus Othmar Wolfgang; Seyffertitz, Malina et al.
in: International Journal of Hydrogen Energy , Jahrgang 114.2025, Nr. 31 March, 14.03.2025, S. 519-533.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

Vancouver

Stock S, Trost COW, Seyffertitz M, Selinger J, Gupta RK, Tampaxis C et al. Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy . 2025 Mär 14;114.2025(31 March):519-533. doi: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.03.002

Author

Stock, Sebastian ; Trost, Claus Othmar Wolfgang ; Seyffertitz, Malina et al. / Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials. in: International Journal of Hydrogen Energy . 2025 ; Jahrgang 114.2025, Nr. 31 March. S. 519-533.

Bibtex - Download

@article{901de7f8b22947428f0b166861548933,
title = "Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials",
abstract = "Orange peels and tea leaves accumulate as everyday “breakfast bio-waste” all around the world. Through a simple thermo-chemical process, value from the waste can be obtained, turning it into high-quality products for energy storage applications. This study reports on the synthesis of bio-waste-derived nanoporous carbons and explores the effects of activation agents on the porous structures. Adding new value to different waste materials with an easy and fast synthesis method allows the exploration of those carbons as sophisticated hydrogen storage materials. Through detailed characterization, it was possible to link structural and chemical characteristics to the supercritical H2 adsorption behavior up to pressures of 100 bar at 77K. The activation process leads to Quenched Solid Density Functional Theory (QSDFT) surface areas larger than 2100 m2/g and QSDFT pore volumes beyond 1.5 cm3/g. The H2 uptake is strongly influenced by the pore structure characteristics leading to excess gravimetric capacities of up to 2.6 wt.% at low pressures (1 bar) and 5.3 wt.% at high pressures (30–40 bar). A statistical analysis of the influences of structural and chemical parameters on H2 uptake was performed, highlighting the importance of specific surface area, specific pore volume and average pore size on the pressure-dependent H2 uptake of the carbon materials.",
author = "Sebastian Stock and Trost, {Claus Othmar Wolfgang} and Malina Seyffertitz and Julian Selinger and Gupta, {Ram K.} and Christos Tampaxis and Theodore Steriotis and Claus Rebholz and Christian Mitterer and Oskar Paris and Nikolaos Kostoglou",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.03.002",
language = "English",
volume = "114.2025",
pages = "519--533",
journal = "International Journal of Hydrogen Energy ",
issn = "0360-3199",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "31 March",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transforming breakfast bio-waste into hydrogen storage materials

AU - Stock, Sebastian

AU - Trost, Claus Othmar Wolfgang

AU - Seyffertitz, Malina

AU - Selinger, Julian

AU - Gupta, Ram K.

AU - Tampaxis, Christos

AU - Steriotis, Theodore

AU - Rebholz, Claus

AU - Mitterer, Christian

AU - Paris, Oskar

AU - Kostoglou, Nikolaos

PY - 2025/3/14

Y1 - 2025/3/14

N2 - Orange peels and tea leaves accumulate as everyday “breakfast bio-waste” all around the world. Through a simple thermo-chemical process, value from the waste can be obtained, turning it into high-quality products for energy storage applications. This study reports on the synthesis of bio-waste-derived nanoporous carbons and explores the effects of activation agents on the porous structures. Adding new value to different waste materials with an easy and fast synthesis method allows the exploration of those carbons as sophisticated hydrogen storage materials. Through detailed characterization, it was possible to link structural and chemical characteristics to the supercritical H2 adsorption behavior up to pressures of 100 bar at 77K. The activation process leads to Quenched Solid Density Functional Theory (QSDFT) surface areas larger than 2100 m2/g and QSDFT pore volumes beyond 1.5 cm3/g. The H2 uptake is strongly influenced by the pore structure characteristics leading to excess gravimetric capacities of up to 2.6 wt.% at low pressures (1 bar) and 5.3 wt.% at high pressures (30–40 bar). A statistical analysis of the influences of structural and chemical parameters on H2 uptake was performed, highlighting the importance of specific surface area, specific pore volume and average pore size on the pressure-dependent H2 uptake of the carbon materials.

AB - Orange peels and tea leaves accumulate as everyday “breakfast bio-waste” all around the world. Through a simple thermo-chemical process, value from the waste can be obtained, turning it into high-quality products for energy storage applications. This study reports on the synthesis of bio-waste-derived nanoporous carbons and explores the effects of activation agents on the porous structures. Adding new value to different waste materials with an easy and fast synthesis method allows the exploration of those carbons as sophisticated hydrogen storage materials. Through detailed characterization, it was possible to link structural and chemical characteristics to the supercritical H2 adsorption behavior up to pressures of 100 bar at 77K. The activation process leads to Quenched Solid Density Functional Theory (QSDFT) surface areas larger than 2100 m2/g and QSDFT pore volumes beyond 1.5 cm3/g. The H2 uptake is strongly influenced by the pore structure characteristics leading to excess gravimetric capacities of up to 2.6 wt.% at low pressures (1 bar) and 5.3 wt.% at high pressures (30–40 bar). A statistical analysis of the influences of structural and chemical parameters on H2 uptake was performed, highlighting the importance of specific surface area, specific pore volume and average pore size on the pressure-dependent H2 uptake of the carbon materials.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.03.002

DO - 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.03.002

M3 - Article

VL - 114.2025

SP - 519

EP - 533

JO - International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

JF - International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

SN - 0360-3199

IS - 31 March

ER -