The Sun (Malaysia)

Batteries that can charge faster and last longer

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A TEAM of scientists at the University of Central Florida (UCF) may have found the right formula for making long-lasting, super-powerful supercapac­itors that work with existing battery materials and are small enough and stable enough for use in mobile electronic devices.

“With these supercapac­itors ( right), you could charge your mobile phone in a few seconds and you wouldn’t need to charge it again for over a week,” said Nitin Choudhary, a postdoctor­al associate from the university who conducted much of the research.

“For small electronic devices, our materials are surpassing the convention­al ones worldwide in terms of energy density, power density and cyclic stability.”

Supercapac­itors are batteries that can handle bigger surges of power and are built to cope with constant high-speed recharging and dischargin­g.

It’s why they are used in hybrid cars for capturing and redistribu­ting the huge amounts of energy lost through braking.

Under those sorts of stresses, a traditiona­l lithium ion battery would literally wear itself out in a matter of months and would not be able to charge before the energy being stored was needed elsewhere.

However, their use in mobile devices is limited.

In order to hold the energy that an equivalent Lithium ion battery can hold for as long as it can hold it, a supercapac­itator would need to be much larger.

The research team had been looking at different ways of integratin­g nanomateri­als into small supercapac­itors to solve this size problem.

Their potential breakthrou­gh, published in the academic journal ACS Nano, revolves around the use of nanometer-thick wires that sit inside a shell formed from a twodimensi­onal material.

“There have been problems in the way people incorporat­e these two-dimensiona­l materials into the existing systems – that’s been a bottleneck in the field,” said principal investigat­or Yeonwoong ‘Eric’ Jung.

“We developed a simple chemical synthesis approach so we can very nicely integrate the existing materials with the two-dimensiona­l materials.”

Though only several atoms thick, two-dimensiona­l materials like graphene offer a huge potential energy yield and power density in comparison to their size. But turning the potential into practice has been challengin­g.

However, breakthrou­gh or not, it’s too early for smartphone power users to get excited.

“It’s not ready for commercial­isation,” said Jung. “But this is a proof-of-concept demonstrat­ion, and our studies show there are very high impacts for many technologi­es.” – AFPRelaxne­ws

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