Free-standing 3D-printed monoliths of SrCl2 for ammonia storage as a hydrogen carrier
Journal article, 2025

The alkaline earth metal halides (AEMHs), such as strontium chloride (SrCl2), are promising sorbents for hydrogen storage in the form of ammonia. However, these sorbents suffer from structural disintegration problems due to the extraordinary volume expansion during ammonia sorption. This study reports the fabrication of 3D-printed SrCl2 monoliths scaffolded with bentonite using the direct ink writing technique. The optimized monolith with a 60 % SrCl2 loading exhibited an ammonia storage capacity of 488 mg/g, maintaining remarkable structural integrity and effectively accommodating volumetric changes during sorption and desorption over 20 cycles. The kinetics data revealed that ammonia sorption followed a pseudo-second-order model, and intercrystalline diffusion was the rate-controlling step in the 3D-printed SrCl2 structures. High-pressure sorption isotherms were explained by the dual-site Langmuir-Freundlich model due to surface heterogeneity in terms of energies and binding sites for metal-amine complex formation. Thus, cognitively designed AEMHs monoliths present the potential for ammonia storage in various applications by effectively overcoming structural challenges.

Sorption

3D-printing

Hydrogen

Ammonia

Kinetics

Metal halides

Author

Nasir Shezad

Luleå University of Technology

Marco D'Agostini

University of Padua

Ali Ezzine

University of Padua

Giorgia Franchin

University of Padua

Paolo Colombo

University of Padua

Zhejian Cao

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Farid Akhtar

Luleå University of Technology

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

0360-3199 (ISSN)

Vol. 134 1-9

In-situ measurements of corrosion by neutron reflectivity

VINNOVA (2018-04407), 2018-11-26 -- 2019-11-30.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Chemical Sciences

Other Chemical Engineering

Energy Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.04.432

More information

Latest update

5/9/2025 7