Clay Key to High-Temperature Supercapacitors
Sep. 3, 2013 — Clay, an
abundant and cheap natural material, is a key ingredient in a
supercapacitor that can operate at very high temperatures, according to
Rice University researchers who have developed such a device.
A composite
of clay and an electrolyte allowed Rice University researchers to make
sheets of material that can serve as both electrolyte and a separator in
a new kind of high-temperature supercapacitor. (Credit: Ajayan
Group/Rice University)
The Rice group of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan reported today in Nature's online journal, Scientific Reports,
that the supercapacitor is reliable at temperatures of up to 200
degrees Celsius (392 degrees Fahrenheit) and possibly beyond. It could
be useful for powering devices for use in extreme environments, such as
oil drilling, the military and space.
"Our intention is to completely move away from conventional liquid or
gel-type electrolytes, which have been limited to low-temperature
operation of electrochemical devices," said Arava Leela Mohana Reddy,
lead author and a former research scientist at Rice.
"We found that a clay-based membrane electrolyte is a game-changing
breakthrough that overcomes one of the key limitations of
high-temperature operation of electrochemical energy devices," Reddy
said. "By allowing safe operation over a wide range of temperatures
without compromising on high energy, power and cycle life, we believe we
can dramatically enhance or even eliminate the need for expensive
thermal management systems."
A supercapacitor combines the best qualities of capacitors that
charge in seconds and discharge energy in a burst and rechargeable
batteries that charge slowly but release energy on demand over time. The
ideal supercapacitor would charge quickly, store energy and release it
as needed.
"Researchers have been trying for years to make energy storage
devices like batteries and supercapacitors that work reliably in
high-temperature environments, but this has been challenging, given the
traditional materials used to build these devices," Ajayan said.
In particular, researchers have struggled to find an electrolyte,
which conducts ions between a battery's electrodes, that won't break
down when the heat is on. Another issue has been finding a separator
that won't shrink at high temperatures and lead to short circuits. (The
separator keeps the electrolyte on the anode and cathode sides of a
traditional battery apart while allowing ions to pass through).
"Our innovation has been to identify an unconventional
electrolyte/separator system that remains stable at high temperatures,"
Ajayan said.
The Rice researchers led by Reddy and Rachel Borges solved both
problems at once. First, they investigated using room-temperature ionic
liquids (RTILs) developed in 2009 by European and Australian
researchers. RTILs show low conductivity at room temperature but become
less viscous and more conductive when heated.
Clay has high thermal stability, high sorption capacity, a large
active surface area and high permeability, Reddy said, and is commonly
used in muds for oil drilling, in modern construction, in medical
applications and as a binder by iron and steel foundries.
After combining equal amounts of RTIL and naturally occurring
Bentonite clay into a composite paste, the researchers sandwiched it
between layers of reduced graphene oxide and two current collectors to
form a supercapacitor. Tests and subsequent electron microscope images
of the device showed no change in the materials after heating it to 200
degrees Celsius. In fact, Reddy said, there was very little change in
the material up to 300 degrees Celsius.
"The ionic conductivity increases almost linearly until the material reaches 180 degrees, and then saturates at 200," he said.
Despite a slight drop in capacity observed in the initial
charge/discharge cycles, the supercapacitors were stable through 10,000
test cycles. Both energy and power density improved by two orders of
magnitude as the operating temperature increased from room temperature
to 200 degrees Celsius, the researchers found.
The team took its discovery a step further and combined the RTIL/clay
with a small amount of thermoplastic polyurethane to form a membrane
sheet that can be cut into various shapes and sizes, which allows design
flexibility for devices.
Co-authors of the paper are graduate students Marco-Tulio Rodrigues
and Hemtej Gullapalli and former postdoctoral researcher Kaushik
Balakrishnan, all of Rice; and Glaura Silva, an associate professor at
the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Ajayan
is the Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor in Mechanical
Engineering and Materials Science and of chemistry at Rice. Borges is a
visiting student from the Federal University of Minas Gerais. Reddy is
now an assistant professor at Wayne State University in Detroit.
The Advanced Energy Consortium supported the research.
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