The Asian Age

New nanofibre brings next-gen batteries closer to reality

Researcher­s have now discovered a possible solution to the riddle of powering electric cars

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Researcher­s at Georgia Institute of Technology have created a nanofibre that could help enable the next generation of rechargeab­le batteries and increase the efficiency of hydrogen production from water electrolys­is.

In a study, the researcher­s describe the developmen­t of double perovskite nanofibre that can be used as a highly efficient catalyst in ultrafast oxygen evolution reactions — one of the underlying electroche­mical processes in hydrogen-based energy and the newer metal-air batteries.

“Metal-air batteries, such as those that could power electric vehicles in the future, are able to store a lot of energy in a much smaller space than current batteries,” said researcher Meilin Liu. “The problem is that the batteries lack a cost-efficient catalyst to improve their efficiency. This new catalyst will improve that process.”

Perovskite refers to the crystal structure of the catalyst researcher­s used form the nanofibres.

“This unique crystal structure and the compositio­n the to are vital to enabling better activity and durability for the applicatio­n,” Liu said. During the synthetisa­tion process, the researcher­s used a technique called compositio­n tuning — or “co-doping” — to improve the intrinsic activity of the catalyst by approximat­ely 4.7 times. The perovskite oxide fibre made during the electrospi­nning process was about 20 nanometres in diameter — which thus far is the thinnest diameter reported for electrospu­n perovskite oxide nanofibres.

The researcher­s found that the new substance showed markedly enhanced oxygen evolution reaction capability when compared to existing catalysts.

The new nanofiber’s mass-normalized catalytic activity improved about 72 times greater than the initial powder catalyst, and 2.5 times greater than iridium oxide, which is considered a state of the art catalyst by current standards.

“Solar, wind, geothermal — those are becoming very inexpensiv­e today. But the trouble is those renewable energies are intermitte­nt in nature,” Liu noted. “When there is no wind, you have no power. But what if we could store the energy from the sun or the wind when there’s an excess supply? We can use that extra electricit­y to produce hydrogen and store that energy for use when we need it.”

“To store that energy, batteries are still very expensive,” Liu added. “We need a good catalyst in order for the water electrolys­is to be efficient. This catalyst can speed up electroche­mical reactions in water splitting or metal air batteries.” — ANI

 ??  ?? Metal-air batteries, such as those which could power electric vehicles in the future can store more energy than current batteries and occupy lower space, says researcher Meilin Liu.
Metal-air batteries, such as those which could power electric vehicles in the future can store more energy than current batteries and occupy lower space, says researcher Meilin Liu.

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