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Numerical investigation of pulsed heating effects on MgH2 desorption kinetics and thermal efficiency in solid-state hydrogen storage

Lanbaran, Davoud Abdi, Kojour, Pouria Farokhi, Wang, Chao, Wen, Chuang, Wu, Zhen, Tian, Mi, Li, Bo (2025) Numerical investigation of pulsed heating effects on MgH2 desorption kinetics and thermal efficiency in solid-state hydrogen storage. Applied Energy, 401 . p. 126690. ISSN 0306-2619. (doi:10.1016/j.apenergy.2025.126690) (The full text of this publication is not currently available from this repository. You may be able to access a copy if URLs are provided) (KAR id:114464)

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Abstract

Magnesium hydride (MgH₂) offers high-capacity solid-state hydrogen storage, but it suffers from slow desorption due to its poor thermal conductivity. Here we model an MgH₂ composite containing 8 wt expanded natural graphite (ENG), which raises the effective conductivity to 4.2 W.m−1.K−1. Finite element method (FEM) simulations performed in COMSOL Multiphysics compare a conventional constant radial heat flux with a stepwise ON/OFF (pulsed) regime. A 15-min ON/OFF cycle shortens the desorption time by 25 from 60 to 45 min, keeps the wall temperature below 661 K, and leaves 3.4 kJ.m−3 of recoverable sensible heat, whereas constant heating leaves none. Raising conductivity above 4.2 W.m−1.K−1 offers little extra benefit because gas-phase transport and surface kinetics then dominate. Pulsed heating also exploits thermal-conductivity-evolution feedback (TCEF): MgH₂ converts to metallic Mg during each pulse, further boosting conductivity and accelerating subsequent pulses. Heat-flux sequencing, therefore, delivers faster, more energy-efficient hydrogen release without internal heat-exchanger hardware, highlighting a simple path to improved thermal management in MgH₂-based composite storage systems.

Item Type: Article
DOI/Identification number: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2025.126690
Uncontrolled keywords: Magnesium hydride (MgH₂), Hydrogen desorption, Pulsed heat flux, ON/OFF cycle, Thermal efficiency
Subjects: T Technology > TK Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering
Institutional Unit: Schools > School of Engineering, Mathematics and Physics > Engineering
Former Institutional Unit:
There are no former institutional units.
Depositing User: Chao Wang
Date Deposited: 06 May 2026 13:00 UTC
Last Modified: 06 May 2026 13:00 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/114464 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

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