Magnesium hydride
Magnesium hydride is the chemical compound with the molecular formula MgH2. It contains 7.66% by weight of hydrogen and has been studied as a potential hydrogen storage medium.
For comparison, one cubic meter can contain 45 kg of hydrogen pressurized at 700 atm, 70 kg of liquid hydrogen, or up to 106 kg of hydrogen bound in magnesium hydride.
Magnesium hydride is also investigated for use in thermobaric weapons and incendiary weapons, standalone or as a mixture with a solid oxidizer; China tested a "hydrogen bomb" using the substance. It can be also used in emulsion explosives as a source of bubbles and additional fuel. It can be added to improve heat release of aluminized explosive compositions and to improve burn rate of propellants.
Preparation
In 1951 preparation from the elements was first reported involving direct hydrogenation of Mg metal at high pressure and temperature with MgI2 catalyst:Lower temperature production from Mg and H2 using nanocrystalline Mg produced in ball mills has been investigated. Other preparations include:
- the hydrogenation of magnesium anthracene under mild conditions:
- the reaction of diethylmagnesium with lithium aluminium hydride
- product of complexed MgH2 e.g. MgH2.THF by the reaction of phenylsilane and dibutyl magnesium in ether or hydrocarbon solvents in the presence of THF or TMEDA as ligand.
Structure and bonding
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The bonding in the rutile form is sometimes described as being partially covalent in nature rather than purely ionic; charge density determination by synchrotron x-ray diffraction indicates that the magnesium atom is fully ionised and spherical in shape and the hydride ion is elongated.
Molecular forms of magnesium hydride, MgH, MgH2, Mg2H, Mg2H2, Mg2H3, and Mg2H4 molecules identified by their vibrational spectra have been found in matrix isolated samples at below 10 K, formed following laser ablation of magnesium in the presence of hydrogen. The Mg2H4 molecule has a bridged structure analogous to dimeric aluminium hydride, Al2H6.
Reactions
MgH2 readily reacts with water to form hydrogen gas:At 287 °C it decomposes to produce H2 at 1 bar pressure. The high temperature required is seen as a limitation in the use of MgH2 as a reversible hydrogen storage medium: