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Inverse Spillover and Dimensionality Effects on Interstitial Hydrogen
by
Droulias, Sotirios A.
, Primetzhofer, Daniel
, Pálsson, Gunnar K.
, Komander, Kristina
, Tsakiris, Theofanis
, Wolff, Max
, Sörme, David
in
Catalysis
/ Chromium
/ Critical temperature
/ finite size
/ Hydrogen
/ hydrogen depletion
/ Hydrogen storage
/ interface phenomena
/ Iron
/ Metal hydrides
/ phase transitions
/ real space analysis
/ Room temperature
/ Superlattices
/ transition metal hydrides
2025
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Inverse Spillover and Dimensionality Effects on Interstitial Hydrogen
by
Droulias, Sotirios A.
, Primetzhofer, Daniel
, Pálsson, Gunnar K.
, Komander, Kristina
, Tsakiris, Theofanis
, Wolff, Max
, Sörme, David
in
Catalysis
/ Chromium
/ Critical temperature
/ finite size
/ Hydrogen
/ hydrogen depletion
/ Hydrogen storage
/ interface phenomena
/ Iron
/ Metal hydrides
/ phase transitions
/ real space analysis
/ Room temperature
/ Superlattices
/ transition metal hydrides
2025
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Inverse Spillover and Dimensionality Effects on Interstitial Hydrogen
by
Droulias, Sotirios A.
, Primetzhofer, Daniel
, Pálsson, Gunnar K.
, Komander, Kristina
, Tsakiris, Theofanis
, Wolff, Max
, Sörme, David
in
Catalysis
/ Chromium
/ Critical temperature
/ finite size
/ Hydrogen
/ hydrogen depletion
/ Hydrogen storage
/ interface phenomena
/ Iron
/ Metal hydrides
/ phase transitions
/ real space analysis
/ Room temperature
/ Superlattices
/ transition metal hydrides
2025
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Inverse Spillover and Dimensionality Effects on Interstitial Hydrogen
Journal Article
Inverse Spillover and Dimensionality Effects on Interstitial Hydrogen
2025
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Overview
Nanoscaling interstitial metal hydrides offers opportunities for hydrogenation applications by enhancing kinetics, increasing surface area, and allowing for tunable properties. The introduction of interfaces impacts hydrogen absorption properties and distribution heterogeneously, making it, however, challenging to examine the multiple concurrent mechanisms, especially at the atomic level. Here, the effect of proximity on interstitial hydrogen in ultrathin single‐crystalline vanadium films is demonstrated by comparing hydride formation in identically strained Fe/V‐ and Cr/V‐superlattices. Pressure concentration and excess resistivity isotherms show higher absolute solubility of hydrogen, higher critical temperature, and concentration in a Cr/V‐superlattice. Direct measurements of hydrogen site location and thermal vibrations show identical site occupation of octahedral z at room temperature with a vibrational amplitude of 0.20–0.25 Å over a wide range of hydrogen concentrations. These findings are consistent with a more extended region of hydrogen depletion in the vicinity of Fe compared to Cr, which showcases an inverse of the hydrogen spillover effect. Advancing the understanding of interface effects resolves previously puzzling differences in the hydrogen loading of Fe/V‐ and Cr/V‐superlattices and is relevant for advancing both catalysis and storage. Interstitial hydrogen behaves distinctly at interfaces compared to the bulk. Vanadium films show proximity‐dependent hydrogen depletion near interfaces–an inverse of hydrogen spillover. Ion beam and resistivity measurements reveal Fe/V‐superlattices have lower hydrogen solubility and higher critical temperature than Cr/V due to proximity‐induced finite size effects, with similar site occupation.
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc,Wiley-VCH
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