I think that this unusual
material just joined the energy storage sweepstakes. It even sounds like they
can make it work.
The target remains a battery
capable of providing a five hundred mile range to a reasonably sized electric
vehicle. These sounds like it may do it
and it will soon join a widening field of competitors.
We are still waiting for EEStor
to overcome its manufacturing issues while others play coy.
What is clear is that the problem
is on the verge of been solved, which is why the auto industry is visibly tooling
up for an electric future. The moment
the battery can be shipped, the automobiles will be on the lot.
On top of that, we have the Rossi
Focardi Reactors coming on the market in months and that will solve the power
problem.
I predict that by 2015, the
switch to electrical vehicles will be in full swing.
'Activated' graphite oxide boosts supercapacitors
May 13, 2011
Researchers in the US
have discovered a new form of carbon produced by "activating"
expanded graphite oxide. The material is full of tiny nanometre-sized pores
and contains highly curved atom-thick walls throughout its 3D structure.
The team has also found that the material performs exceptionally well as an
electrode material for supercapacitors, allowing such energy-storage devices to
be used in a wider range of applications.
Capacitors are devices that store electric charge on two conducting
surfaces separated by an insulating gap – the larger the surface area of the
capacitor, the greater its capacity to hold charge. Charging a capacitor
requires electrical energy, which is recovered when the device is discharged.
Supercapacitors, also known as electric double-layer capacitors or
electrochemical capacitors, store more charge thanks to the double layer formed
at an electrolyte–electrode interface when a voltage is applied. Although
already used in applications such as mobile phones, these devices are currently
limited by their relatively low energy storage density compared with batteries.
Now, Rodney Ruoff and colleagues at the University
of Texas at Austin
and scientists at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, the University
of Texas at Dallas and QuantaChrome Instruments have
synthesized a new form of porous carbon with a very high surface area. The
carbon consists of a continuous 3D porous network with single-atom-thick walls,
with a significant fraction being "negative curvature carbon" similar
to inside-out buckyballs. The researchers used the material to make a
two-electrode supercapacitor with high gravimetric densities of capacitance,
energy capacity and power per unit mass. What is more, the team claims that the
process used to make this form of carbon can be scaled up to produce industrial
quantities of the material.
Expanded with microwaves
Ruoff and co-workers begin by converting samples of graphite into
graphite oxide, which they expand using microwaves to generate what they have
dubbed "microwave-expanded graphite oxide" (MEGO). The MEGO is then
treated with potassium hydroxide so that its surface is covered (or decorated)
with the chemical. After heating at 800 °C for about an hour in an inert
gas, "activated MEGO" or aMEGO is obtained.
"What is quite surprising is that the [potassium hydroxide]
remarkably restructures the carbon so that a 3D porous structure is generated
with essentially no edge atoms," Ruoff toldphysicsworld.com. "Every
wall in the structure is one atom thick and all the carbon atoms there are sp2-bonded."
The researchers used aMEGO as the carbon for electrodes in a
supercapacitor – mixing it with different electrolytes. They obtained
"exceptional" gravimetric energy densities that are about four times
higher than that of state-of-the-art conventional supercapacitors, for
example those based on porous activated carbon, on the market today.
Best BET
The porous carbon produced also has a "BET"
(Brunauer–Emmett&nadash;Teller) surface area of up to 3100 m2/g. For
comparison, typical activated-carbon materials have BET surface areas in the
range of 1000 to 2000 m2
And that is not all: the material is also very stable and continues to
work at 97% capacitance even after 10,000 constant current charge/discharge
cycles.
"The Texas
work shows an important increase in energy capacity on a gravimetric basis, but
unfortunately the graphene material has relatively low density. It will be
interesting to see if further work yields higher-density materials with
corresponding improvements in volumetric energy density," says John Miller
of the capacitor maker JME and Case
Western Reserve University ,
who was not involved in the research.
Ruoff and colleagues are optimistic and now plan to further improve the
new carbon and hope to obtain further funding so that they can carry on
conducting more fundamental research on generating still better materials based
on similar types of structures. "We also hope to optimize performance in other
electrical energy-storage systems in parallel," reveals Ruoff.
The work is reported in Science.
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