Hydrate-Based H2 Storage with Porous Materials as Heterogeneous Promoters: State of the Art and Challenges

Lijin Chen, Valeska Ting, Yuxuan Zhang, Joe Coventry, Alireza Rahbari, Zhenyuan Yin, Fei Wang, Mi Tian, Sebastien Rochat, Zhongbin Zhang, Shuai Deng Deng, Melinda Krebsz, Parimal Bhomick, Xiaolin Wang

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Abstract

Clathrate hydrates, which can store hydrogen inside crystalline, ice-like structures, have great potential for hydrogen storage. However, kinetic and thermodynamic promoters are often needed to improve the formation rates and stability ranges. Porous materials exhibit significant potential for hydrate-based hydrogen storage by modulating the kinetics, stability, and storage capacity, unlocking substantial application prospects. This review systematically elucidates the critical mechanisms through which porous materials influence hydrogen hydrate behavior, with a comprehensive analysis of the synergistic roles of material properties and engineering operation conditions. Material properties include the nano-confinement effect, which markedly enhances hydrate formation, optimized pore and particle sizes that increase contact area, functionalized surfaces and rough structures that improve nucleation and stability, and moderate hydrophobicity that enhances gas–water contact. Engineering operation conditions involve maintaining suitable temperatures and pressures to ensure stable hydrate formation, uniform spatial layouts to optimize gas diffusion, and water saturation control to boost reaction efficiency. The review further summarizes the application characteristics of various porous materials, including carbon-based materials (e.g. activated carbon), inorganic materials (e.g. silica), organic porous polymers (e.g. polyurethane foam), and hybrid materials (e.g. metal–organic frameworks), evaluating their respective strengths, limitations and suitability. Multiscale insights highlight the macroscopic focus on hydrate formation within high-pressure reactors, the mesoscopic emphasis on optimizing particle surface reactions, and the microscopic attention to confined hydrate growth within pore structures. Future research should prioritize the refinement of nanopore architectures, the development of advanced hydrophilic/hydrophobic materials, the enhancement of reactor designs, and the integration of thermal management and kinetic optimization to propel hydrogen hydrate storage technology toward practical implementation.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)27001-27049
Number of pages49
JournalJournal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume13
Issue number33
Early online date17 Jul 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Aug 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Funding

This project is funded by the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Project number: 2023/TRAC733 (PRO-1050)). Dr Xiaolin Wang is the recipient of an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (Project number: DE200100326) funded by the Australian Government.

FundersFunder number
Government of Western Australia
Australian Renewable Energy Agency2023/TRAC733, PRO-1050
Australian Research CouncilDE200100326

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • General Chemistry
    • Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
    • General Materials Science

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