M
Mahendra Yadav
Researcher at Banaras Hindu University
Publications - 45
Citations - 1798
Mahendra Yadav is an academic researcher from Banaras Hindu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 32 publications receiving 1540 citations. Previous affiliations of Mahendra Yadav include P.G. College & Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Liquid-phase chemical hydrogen storage materials
Mahendra Yadav,Qiang Xu +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey the research progress in hydrogen generation from liquid-phase chemical hydrogen storage materials and their regeneration, and present a review of these materials in hydrogen storage.
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Catalytic chromium reduction using formic acid and metal nanoparticles immobilized in a metal-organic framework.
Mahendra Yadav,Qiang Xu +1 more
TL;DR: The resulting composites were investigated in the reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) using formic acid, showing that the Pt and Pd catalysts were active with the Pt nanoparticles immobilized in MOF exhibiting the best performance.
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Strong metal–molecular support interaction (SMMSI): Amine-functionalized gold nanoparticles encapsulated in silica nanospheres highly active for catalytic decomposition of formic acid
TL;DR: In this paper, the first example of monometallic gold nanoparticles, functionalized with amine and encapsulated in silica nanospheres, was reported as a high-performance catalyst for hydrogen generation from aqueous formic acid for chemical hydrogen storage.
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Palladium silica nanosphere-catalyzed decomposition of formic acid for chemical hydrogen storage
TL;DR: Palladium nanoparticles encapsulated within hollow silica nanospheres (Pd@SiO2) were synthesized using Pd(NH3)4Cl2 as precursor in a polyoxyethylene-nonylphenyl ether/cyclohexane reversed micelle system followed by NaBH4 reduction.
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Synergistic catalysis of Au-Co@SiO2 nanospheres in hydrolytic dehydrogenation of ammonia borane for chemical hydrogen storage
TL;DR: In this article, a reverse-micelle method was used to synthesize core-shell structured Au-Co@SiO2 nanospheres, which showed better catalytic activity than that of Au-co@Si O2-RT.