Chuyển đến nội dung chính

Looking inside supercapacitors could help to build higher performing parts


Looking inside supercapacitors could help to build higher performing parts
Researchers from the University of Cambridge, together with French collaborators based in Toulouse, have developed a method that allows the inside of supercapacitors to be viewed at the atomic level. The team says this approach could be used in order to optimise and improve the devices.
By using a combination of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and scales sensitive enough to detect changes in mass of a 1µg, the researchers could visualise how ions move around in a supercapacitor. They found that, while charging, different processes are at work in the two identical pieces of carbon 'sponge' which function as the electrodes.

Dr John Griffin, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Chemistry, said: "[Supercapacitors are] much better at absorbing charge than batteries, but since they have much lower density, they hold far less of that charge. Being able to see what's going on inside these devices will help us to control their properties, which could help to make them smaller and cheaper, and that might make them a high power alternative to batteries."

When a supercapacitor is being charged, ions 'stick' to the surface' when being discharged, they 'hop' off the surface and move back into the electrolyte.

"To increase the area for ions to stick to, we fill the carbon electrode with tiny holes, like a carbon sponge," said Dr Griffin. "But it's hard to know what the ions are doing inside those holes."

In their study, the researchers used NMR to look inside functioning supercapacitors to see how they charge and store energy and an electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance to measure changes in mass.

From the two sets of information, the researchers built a precise picture of what happens inside a supercapacitor while it charges.

"In a battery, the two electrodes are different materials, so different processes are at work," said Dr Griffin. "In a supercapacitor, the two electrodes are made of the same porous carbon sponge, so you'd think the same process would take place at both – but it turns out the charge storage process is more complicated than we previously thought."

The experiments showed the two electrodes behave differently: in the negative electrode, positive ions are attracted to the surface as the supercapacitor charges. But in the positive electrode, an ion 'exchange' happens, as negative ions are attracted to the surface, while at the same time, positive ions are repelled.

The team will now try to understand why different ions behave differently on charging and attempt to design systems with higher performance.

Source: newelectronics

Nhận xét

Bài đăng phổ biến từ blog này

Understanding phase noise in signal generators

Source:  http://www.testtek.com/en/detail-info.php?id=2151 Signal generators manufacturers set great store by specifying phase noise, such that, regardless of the application, phase noise is frequently taken as a proxy of the equipment's overall performance. However, phase noise performance might have little or no affect in some applications. For example, 'close in' phase noise creates problems when the signal generator is used as a local oscillator, limiting its sensitivity or impairing bit error rate (BER) performance if used as a clock. 'Far out' phase noise, on the other hand, affects wideband communications systems by raising the noise floor and limiting the reception of poor signals. Choosing a signal generator to match phase noise performance to the requirements of the application can be difficult as manufacturers often characterise phase noise performance at different carrier wave frequencies and at different offsets from the carrier signal. ...

What is Internet of Things (IoT)?

Source:  http://testtek.com/en/detail-info.php?id=2139 The  Internet of Things  ( IoT , sometimes  Internet of Everything ) is the network of physical objects or "things" embedded with electronics, software, sensors and connectivity to enable it to achieve greater value and service by exchanging data with the manufacturer, operator and/or other connected devices based on the infrastructure of International Telecommunication Union's Global Standards Initiative.  Internet of Things connect physically and remotely by individuals, for both public sector and private sector,  in the sense of a computer network grid, of a created electrical device that is in place, with economic benefit and potential usefulness.  Each thing is uniquely identifiable through its embedded computing system but is able to interoperate within the existing  Internet  infrastructure. Experts estimate that the IoT will consist of almost 50 billion obj...