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Showing papers by "Jacques Huot published in 2023"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the effects of substitution by Hf and synthesis method on microstructure and crystal structure evolution in the high-entropy alloy HfxTi(1−x)NbVZr are reported.
Abstract: In the present work, the effects of (i) Ti replacement by Hf and (ii) the synthesis method on microstructure and crystal structure evolution in the high-entropy alloy HfxTi(1−x)NbVZr are reported. The results of scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis of alloys prepared by both arc-melting and induction-melting are compared with theoretical thermodynamic calculations using the CALPHAD approach. The non-equilibrium thermodynamic calculations agree well with the experimental observations for the arc-melted alloys: a mixture of body-centered cubic (BCC) and cubic C15 Laves phases occurs for low-Ti-concentration alloys and a single BCC phase is obtained for high-Ti alloys. The agreement is not as good when using the induction-melting method: equilibrium solidification calculations predict that the most stable state is a phase mixture of BCC, hexagonal close-packed, and a cubic C15 Laves phase, while experimentally only one BCC and one hexagonal C14 Laves phase were found. The estimation of the exact cooling rate and the lack of a thermodynamic database can explain the difference. In addition, for both methods, the thermodynamic calculation confirms that for a high Ti concentration, the BCC phase is stable, whereas phase separation is enhanced with a higher Hf concentration.

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Jul 2023-Energies
TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of the substitution of Cr by Fe in Ti16V60Cr24−xFex + 4 wt.% Zr alloys where x = 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24.
Abstract: In body-centered cubic (BCC) alloys of transition elements, elemental addition or substitution in the vanadium-based alloys can be beneficial for improving the hydrogen storage properties and for reducing the production cost. In this context, the current study focused on the effect of the substitution of Cr by Fe in Ti16V60Cr24−xFex + 4 wt.% Zr alloys where x = 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24. The microstructure of each alloy was composed of a matrix having a chemical composition close to the nominal one and a Zr-rich region. From X-ray diffraction patterns, it was found that the matrix has a BCC structure, and the Zr-rich regions present the C14 Laves phase structure. The lattice parameter of BCC phases decreased linearly with x, in accordance with Vegard’s law. The measurement of the first hydrogenation at 298 K under 3 MPa of hydrogen revealed a decrease in the maximum hydrogen capacity: 3.8 wt.% for x = 0, 3.1 wt.% for x = 4 and around 2 wt.% for x = 8 to 24. The XRD patterns after hydrogenation showed a BCT phase for all alloys, with a C14 phase for x = 4, 8, 12 and with C14 and C15 for x = 16, 20 and 24.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of the Cr/Mn ratio on the microstructure, crystal structure and hydrogen absorption properties of quaternary alloys of compositions Ti30V60Mn(10−x)Crx (x = 0, 3.3, 6.6 and 10) + 4 wt.% Zr was investigated.
Abstract: In this paper, we studied the effect of the Cr/Mn ratio on the microstructure, crystal structure and hydrogen absorption properties of the quaternary alloys of compositions Ti30V60Mn(10−x)Crx (x = 0, 3.3, 6.6 and 10) + 4 wt.% Zr. The addition of Hf instead of Zr was also investigated. We found that all alloys are single-phase BCC (Body Centred Cubic) but with regions of high concentration of Zr (or Hf). The first hydrogenation at room temperature under 2 MPa of hydrogen happens quickly without any incubation time. The Ti30V60Mn3.3Cr6.6 + 4 wt.% Zr alloy showed the fastest kinetics and highest hydrogen absorption (3.8 wt.%). For this composition, replacing Zr with Hf made the first hydrogenation slower and reduced the capacity to 3.4 wt.%. No activation was observed for the same alloy without additives. As the alloy without additives did not absorb hydrogen at all, it means that the presence of these high concentrations of Zr (or Hf) is essential for quick first hydrogenation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors used scanning photoemission microscopy to investigate the composition and chemical state of the various phases present in this alloy and how they change upon hydrogenation/dehydrogenation.
Abstract: The alloy TiFe is widely used as hydrogen storage material. However, the first hydrogenation is difficult. It was found that the addition of zirconium greatly improves the kinetic of first hydrogenation, but the mechanism is not well understood. In this paper, we report the use of scanning photoemission microscopy to investigate the composition and chemical state of the various phases present in this alloy and how they change upon hydrogenation/dehydrogenation. We found the presence of different oxide phases that were not seen by conventional SEM investigation. The nature of these oxides phases seems to change upon hydrogenation/dehydrogenation cycle. This indicates that oxide phases may play a more significant role in the hydrogen absorption as what was previously believed.