Researchers at Monash University in Australia have developed a new carbon -based material that they claim to store so much energy as traditional lead acid batteries, while delivering electricity much faster than conventional batteries.
Researchers at Monash University have applied a rapid thermal glowing step to a graphite oxide prisoner to deliver super capacitors that have reached power densities, as high as 69.2 kW per liter, while quickly demonstrating charging options with excellent cycle stability.
Supercondensators are an upcoming class of energy storage devices that save electrostatically, rather than due to chemical reactions such as batteries. Until now, an important barrier was that only a small part of the surface of the carbon material – essential for storing energy – was accessible to use.
Professor Mainak Majumder, director of the ARC Research Hub for advanced production with 2D materials (AM2D), based in Monash’s Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, said that the researchers could unlock much more of that surface by simply changing the way the material is heated.
“This discovery can enable us to build quickly charging super capacitors that store enough energy to replace batteries in many applications and deliver it much faster,” he said.
Majumder said that the key to development lies in a new material architecture called multi-skill Reduced graphene oxide (M-RGO), which is synthesized from natural graphite.
The researchers then used a fast thermal glowing process to create a highly curved graphene structure with precise paths for ions to move quickly and efficiently. The result is a material that offers both high energy density and high power density.
Image: Monash University
Study Co-author Petar Jovanović, a researcher in the AM2D-Hub, said that when the new supercondensers were assembled in zak cell devices, volumetric energy densities up to 99.5 WH/L and power densities achieved and power densities as high as 69.2 kW/L, along with Langerermijnijnijnijnijnijnijnijnijnijnijnijnin.
“These performance statistics are among the best ever reported for carbon -based super capacitors, and crucial is that the process is scalable and compatible with Australian raw materials,” he said.
The researchers said that their development A marks a big leap forward in the worldwide race to build energy storage devices that are both fast and powerful and release the road for applications of the next generation in electrified transport, grid stabilization and consumer electronics.
Phillip Aitchison, Chief Technology Officer of Monash Spinout Ionic Industries and a co-author of the study, said that movements are already underway to commercialize the new technology.
“Ionic Industries was established to commercialize innovations such as these and we are now making commercial quantities of these graphic materials,” he said. “We work together with energy storage partners to bring this breakthrough to market -led applications, where both high energy and fast electricity delivery are essential.”
The results appear in the research paper Operando Intermediate layers Expansion of multi -skill -curved graphene for volumetrically efficient supercondensatorsPublished in the Nature communication.
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