|
Batteries Made From World’s Thinnest Material Could Power Tomorrow’s Electric Cars
Engineering Researchers at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute Use Intentionally Blemished Graphene
Paper To Create Easy-To-Make, Quick-Charging Lithium-ion
Battery With High Power Density
SEM image of the cross section of
photo-thermally reduced graphene shows an expanded
structure. The graphene sheets are spaced apart with an
inter-connected network allowing for greater electrolyte
wetting and lithium ion access for efficient high rate
performance in lithium ions batteries.
|
Engineering researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
made a sheet of paper from the world’s thinnest material,
graphene, and then zapped the paper with a laser or camera
flash to blemish it with countless cracks, pores, and other
imperfections. The result is a graphene anode material that can
be charged or discharged 10 times faster than conventional
graphite anodes used in today’s lithium (Li)-ion batteries.
Rechargeable Li-ion batteries are the industry standard for
mobile phones, laptop and tablet computers, electric cars, and
a range of other devices. While Li-ion batteries have a high
energy density and can store large amounts of energy, they
suffer from a low power density and are unable to quickly
accept or discharge energy. This low power density is why it
takes about an hour to charge your mobile phone or laptop
battery, and why electric automobile engines cannot rely on
batteries alone and require a supercapacitor for high-power
functions such as acceleration and braking.
The Rensselaer research team, led by nanomaterials expert Nikhil Koratkar,
sought to solve this problem and create a new battery that
could hold large amounts of energy but also quickly accept and
release this energy. Such an innovation could alleviate the
need for the complex pairing of Li-ion batteries and
supercapacitors in electric cars, and lead to simpler,
better-performing automotive engines based solely on
high-energy, high-power Li-ion batteries. Koratkar and his team
are confident their new battery, created by intentionally
engineering defects in graphene, is a critical stepping stone
on the path to realizing this grand goal. Such batteries could
also significantly shorten the time it takes to charge portable
electronic devices from phones and laptops to medical devices
used by paramedics and first responders.
“Li-ion battery technology is magnificent, but truly
hampered by its limited power density and its inability to
quickly accept or discharge large amounts of energy. By using
our defect-engineered graphene paper in the battery
architecture, I think we can help overcome this limitation,”
said Koratkar, the John A.
Clark and Edward T. Crossan Professor of Engineering at
Rensselaer. “We believe this discovery is ripe for
commercialization, and can make a significant impact on the
development of new batteries and electrical systems for
electric automobiles and portable electronics
applications.”
Results of the study were published this week by the journal
ACS Nano in the paper “Photo-thermally reduced
graphene as high power anodes for lithium ion batteries.” See
the paper online at: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nn303145j
Koratkar and his team started investigating graphene as a
possible replacement for the graphite used as the anode
material in today’s Li-ion batteries. Essentially a single
layer of the graphite found commonly in our pencils or the
charcoal we burn on our barbeques, graphene is an atom-thick
sheet of carbon atoms arranged like a nanoscale chicken-wire
fence. In previous studies, Li-ion batteries with graphite
anodes exhibited good energy density but low power density,
meaning they could not charge or discharge quickly. This slow
charging and discharging was because lithium ions could only
physically enter or exit the battery’s graphite anode from the
edges, and slowly work their way across the length of the
individual layers of graphene.
Koratkar’s solution was to use a known technique to create a
large sheet of graphene oxide paper. This paper is about the
thickness of a piece of everyday printer paper, and can be made
nearly any size or shape. The research team then exposed some
of the graphene oxide paper to a laser, and other samples of
the paper were exposed to a simple flash from a digital camera.
In both instances, the heat from the laser or photoflash
literally caused mini-explosions throughout the paper, as the
oxygen atoms in graphene oxide were violently expelled from the
structure. The aftermath of this oxygen exodus was sheets of
graphene pockmarked with countless cracks, pores, voids, and
other blemishes. The pressure created by the escaping oxygen
also prompted the graphene paper to expand five-fold in
thickness, creating large voids between the individual graphene
sheets.
The researchers quickly learned this damaged graphene paper
performed remarkably well as an anode for a Li-ion battery.
Whereas before the lithium ions slowly traversed the full
length of graphene sheets to charge or discharge, the ions now
used the cracks and pores as shortcuts to move quickly into or
out of the graphene—greatly increasing the battery’s overall
power density. Koratkar’s team demonstrated how their
experimental anode material could charge or discharge 10 times
faster than conventional anodes in Li-ion batteries without
incurring a significant loss in its energy density. Despite the
countless microscale pores, cracks, and voids that are
ubiquitous throughout the structure, the graphene paper anode
is remarkably robust, and continued to perform successfully
even after more than 1,000 charge/discharge cycles. The high
electrical conductivity of the graphene sheets also enabled
efficient electron transport in the anode, which is another
necessary property for high-power applications.
Koratkar said the process of making these new graphene paper
anodes for Li-ion batteries can easily be scaled up to suit the
needs of industry. The graphene paper can be made in
essentially any size and shape, and the photo-thermal exposure
by laser or camera flashes is an easy and inexpensive process
to replicate. The researchers have filed for patent protection
for their discovery. The next step for this research project is
to pair the graphene anode material with a high-power cathode
material to construct a full battery.
Along with Koratkar, co-authors of the paper are Rensselaer
graduate students Rahul Mukherjee, Abhay Varghese Thomas, and
Ajay Krishnamurthy, all of the Department of Mechanical,
Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering (MANE).
The study was funded by the National Science Foundation,
and supported by Koratkar’s John A. Clark and Edward T.Crossan
Endowed Chair Professorship at Rensselaer.
Koratkar is a professor in MANE and the Department of Materials Science and
Engineering at Rensselaer. He is also a faculty member of
the university’s Center for
Future Energy Systems and the Rensselaer Nanotechnology
Center.
For more information on the Koratkar’s research at
Rensselaer, visit:
|
Published
August 20,
2012 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
|