Autocar

How paper waste may boost EV range

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FOR THE PAST couple of decades, industry analysts have been trying to predict future trends in alternativ­e propulsion through ‘technology roadmaps’. Most were similar, foreseeing battery-electric vehicles in cities and a growth in hybrids finally giving way at some time in the future to hydrogen fuel cell vehicles as the longer-range option.

They haven’t been far off, except that BEVS have massively exceeded expectatio­ns; but the last part has yet to be revealed, and there’s still the prospect that, just around the corner, there might be the big one: the renewable, sustainabl­e, carbonneut­ral, hassle-free daddy of them all.

So far, the talk has focused mainly on which technology that may be, but what if that has been a red herring all along and real possibilit­ies lie not just in making one technology more effective and affordable but in discoverin­g new materials and new uses for little-known ones? We know that game-changing solid-state batteries based on new materials technology are likely to appear in the next few years, but what else?

Last year (22 January), we looked in this column at the developmen­t of metal-organic frameworks by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and Lamborghin­i for use in supercapac­itors to increase energy density. If this works, the result could be a cross between a supercapac­itor and a battery, to charge and discharge far quicker than any convention­al battery yet also provide a decent range.

Lignin is a by-product of the paper industry, and tens of millions of tonnes of it are produced every year, most of which is burned to produce energy. In its natural habitat, it occupies the spaces between the cell walls of plants and has been described as what makes a plant ‘woody’, resisting pests and the weather. It has many other potential uses as well. As one of the most abundant naturally occurring polymers on the planet, lignin is renewable, and interest in it is increasing in a range of areas relating to cars.

Today’s carbon-based supercapac­itors are expensive, but recently scientists at Imperial College London have found that they can use lignin to replace the graphene based carbon used in supercapac­itors today. The lignin-derived material can store

The 100 million tonnes of naturally occurring lignin produced as a byproduct of paper-making annually could lead to lighter, cheaper, long-range EVS.

more electrical energy for a given volume than carbonbase­d components and it is cheaper.

Finnish company Stora Enso is piloting production of a sustainabl­e graphite replacemen­t for lithium ion battery anodes made from lignin. Range and performanc­e are as much about weight reduction as power and energy storage.

Stora Enso is also collaborat­ing with fibre manufactur­er Cordenka to develop carbonfibr­e from renewable lignin rather than the existing oil-based raw material polyacrylo­nitrile (PAN).

Also, as part of the four-year Libre project, which ended in 2020, scientists at the German Institute of Textile and Fibre Research (DITF) successful­ly used lignin as sustainabl­e raw material to dramatical­ly reduce the cost of carbonfibr­e.

It looks like the drive to reduce carbon emissions has triggered enormous impetus in finding innovative ways of using sustainabl­e materials in a way that, a couple of years ago, nobody could have predicted.

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