Powerful Graphene Hybrid Supercapacitors Challenge NiMH Batteries
- Posted by doEEEt Media Group
- On January 18, 2021
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and Other Supercapacitors
Supercapacitors challenge batteries
A team working with Roland Fischer, Professor of Inorganic and Metal-Organic Chemistry at the Technical University Munich (TUM) has developed a highly efficient supercapacitor. The energy storage device is a novel, powerful, and sustainable graphene hybrid material with comparable performance data to currently utilized batteries.
Usually, energy storage is associated with batteries and accumulators that provide energy for electronic devices. However, in laptops, cameras, cellphones or vehicles, so-called supercapacitors are increasingly installed these days.
Unlike batteries, they can quickly store large amounts of energy and put it out just as fast. If, for instance, train brakes when entering the station, supercapacitors store the energy and provide it again when the train needs a lot of energy very quickly while starting up.
However, one problem with supercapacitors to date was their lack of energy density. While lithium accumulators reach an energy density of up to 265 Kilowatt-hours (KW/h), supercapacitors thus far have only been delivering a tenth thereof.
Sustainable material provides high performance.
The team working with TUM chemist Roland Fischer has now developed a novel, powerful, and sustainable graphene hybrid material for supercapacitors. It serves as a positive electrode in the energy storage device. The researchers are combining it with a proven negative electrode based on titan and carbon.
The new energy storage device attains an energy density of up to 73 Wh/kg, which is roughly equivalent to the energy density of a nickel-metal hydride battery and performs much better than most other supercapacitors at a power density of 16 kW/kg. The new supercapacitor’s secret is the combination of different materials – hence, chemists refer to the supercapacitor as “asymmetrical.”
Hybrid materials: Nature is the role model
The researchers are betting on a new strategy to overcome standard materials’ performance limits – they utilize hybrid materials. “Nature is full of highly complex, evolutionarily optimized hybrid materials – bones and teeth are examples. Their mechanical properties, such as hardness and elasticity, were optimized through the combination of various materials by nature,” says Roland Fischer.
The abstract idea of combining basic materials was transferred to supercapacitors by the research team. They used the novel positive electrode of the storage unit with chemically modified graphene and combined it with a nanostructured metal-organic framework, a so-called MOF.
Powerful and stable
Decisive for the performance of graphene hybrids are on the one hand a large specific surface and controllable pore sizes and on the other hand a high electrical conductivity. “The material’s high-performance capabilities are based on the combination of the microporous MOFs with the conductive graphene acid,” explains first author Jayaramulu Kolleboyina, a former guest scientist working with Roland Fischer.
A large surface is important for good supercapacitors. It allows for the collection of a large number of charge carriers within the material – this is the basic principle for the storage of electrical energy.
Through skilful material design, the researchers achieved the feat of linking the graphene acid with the MOFs. The resulting hybrid MOFs have a huge inner surface of up to 900 square meters per gram and are highly performant as positive electrodes in a supercapacitor.
Long stability
However, that is not the only advantage of the new material. To achieve a chemically stable hybrid, one needs strong chemical bonds between the components. The bonds are apparently the same as those between amino acids in proteins, according to Fischer: “In fact, we have connected the graphene acid with a MOF-amino acid, which creates a type of peptide bond.”
The stable connection between the nano-structured components has huge advantages in terms of long term stability: The more stable the bonds, the more charging and discharging cycles are possible without significant performance impairment.
For comparison: A classic lithium accumulator has a useful life of around 5,000 cycles. The new cell developed by the TUM researchers retains close to 90 per cent capacity even after 10,000 cycles.
An international network of experts
Fischer emphasizes how important the unfettered international cooperation the researchers controlled themselves was when it came to developing the new supercapacitor. Accordingly, Jayaramulu Kolleboyina built the team. He was a guest scientist from India invited by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. He is the head of the chemistry department at the newly established Indian Institute of Technology in Jammu.
“Our team also networked with electrochemistry and battery research experts in Barcelona as well as graphene derivate experts from the Czech Republic,” reports Fischer. “Furthermore, we have integrated partners from the USA and Australia. This wonderful, international co-operation promises much for the future.”
Publications:
Jayaramulu Kolleboyina, Michael Horn, Andreas Schneemann, Aristides Bakandritsos, Vaclav Ranc, Martin Petr, Vitalie Stavila, Chandrabhas Narayana, Błażej Scheibe, Štěpán Kment, Michal Otyepka, Nunzio Motta, Deepak Dubal, Radek Zboril und Roland A. Fischer
Covalent Graphene-MOF Hybrids for High Performance Asymmetric Supercapacitors
Advanced Materials, 4.12.2020 – DOI: 10.1002/adma.202004560
Featured photo: Graphene hybrids made from metal-organic frameworks (MOF) and graphenic acid make an excellent positive electrode for supercapacitors, which thus achieve an energy density similar to that of nickel-metal hydride batteries. Image: J. Kolleboyina / IITJ
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