The Chinese Solar Machine Layer by Layer Fire in the Library The Mystery Behind Anesthesia
(Page 2 of 2)
This "fractal-like structure greatly increases the surface area," says Joel Schindall, associate director of MIT's Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems, who was not involved in the work.
In a paper published online this week in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, the Maryland group describes making 125-micrometer-wide arrays, each containing one million nanocapacitors. The surface area of each array is 250 times greater than that of a conventional capacitor of comparable size. The arrays' storage capacity is about 100 microfarads per square centimeter.
But surface area isn't the only determinant of energy density. The Maryland group's nanocapacitors also benefit from the very small spacing between their electrodes, and the work is unique in this respect, says Robert Hebner, director of the Center for Electromechanics at the University of Texas at Austin. Hebner was not involved in the Maryland research.
If the electrodes are far apart, the like charges on their surfaces strongly repel each other. When the electrodes are placed closer together, the negative and positive charges on either side balance out these repulsive forces, and more total charge can be stored in a given area. The total thickness of each nanocapacitor is just 25 nanometers, and the charges can pack very close together. "It's impressive," says Hebner. "I hope they can scale it up."
So far, the nanocapacitor arrays can't store much total energy because they're so small. "Instead of making these little dots, we want to make a large area that contains billions of nanocapacitors to store large amounts of energy," says Lee. Both he and Rubloff say that scaling up to a practical level is not trivial, but the pair is working together to make larger arrays. "There are many scale-up issues," says Rubloff. "We'll look at how large we can make these and still have all of them work."
Even if this problem is solved, they'll still have to make sure that they can effectively connect multiple arrays to one another. But Hebner says that this problem is not intractable, and he points to devices on the market, including sensitive magnetic detectors, that successfully overcome similar connectivity issues.
One advantage of the new fabrication method is that the nanopore dimensions and the respective thicknesses of the electrode and insulator can be carefully controlled. "Regularity and uniformity are central to scaling nanotechnologies up to something manufacturable and commercializable," says Rubloff. "There are still major hurdles, but we're trying to decide how to commercialize this--there's definitely a thirst to do so."
Guest (advancednano)
Difficult to compare farads and cm. There are other systems with 60 microfarads per cm or more. And there are 1000 meters^2/gram.
So 250 times area is what area per gram ?
100 times more energy of conventional capacitor. What is conventional capacitor ? The best commercial one currently capacitor ? 30 W-h/kg ? The rumored eestor 400 W-h/kg ? An average commercial capacitor 6 W-h/kg or less ?
So is 3000-W-h/kg the potential if they can scale?
Re: What's the breakdown voltage?
durs, You hit the first key question right on the button. As of course Q=CV, the voltage limitation inhibits the goal of charge (density) as I understand it. Then of course increasing the dielectric thickness decreases C so, there is a sweet spot somewhere when considering these relationships. Being retired and having worked with ceramic capacitors for many years I can only extrapolate on some other factors having never worked on the nanoscale.
Insulation resistance, dielectric absorption, dissipation factor and dielectric constant with it's relation to temperature range come to mind. As the dielectric material is not identified there are more opportunities and bumps in the road to come. It appears the work being done is sort of a "single layer" capacitor made as an accordian type structure. Unfortunately if this is the case, any one flaw will breakdown the whole structure. Then with a number of units connected together they would have to be in parallel as total C is additive. Once again if one goes bad they all go out of service. Reliability is a must. Hopefully I have been accurate. Let's hope progress can proceed quickly to get away from Carbon.
The technology of high energy storage that can burst energy in or out already exists....flywheel energy storage with P/E Ratios near 100. Flywheels last nearly 20 years and are not effected by temperatures or weather, they can be submerged in water and require almost no maintenance....mass production would bring the costs down lower than lead-acid batteries but unfortunately in today's business society we have buffoons with MBA's making the decisions....
I love the idea of flywheel storage. It is fairly advanced technology.
Any reason why this has not inspired interest from the train industry? They have started putting batteries in their locomotives....
Or any interest from the Navy? They are looking for a way to power their ships and electromagnetic cannons at the same time...
On an interesting side note, the new electromagnetic catapults use three generators that they spin up to 6000 thousand RPM. As one fires off the catapult, the one that fired before it is getting back up to proper RPM. So it can fire again.
They are storing energy in rotation. Very large, slow moving (compared to Flywheel storage) energy storage.
Any thing that caries its energy needs to consider specific energy (megajoules/kilogram)
a quick check at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_density indicates flywheel specific energy ranges .36 to .5 . At the same time lithium thionyl chloride battery is about 2.5
Batteries ability to store more power per kilogram makes it a better choice for locomotives, Flywheel angular momentum and corresponding Gyroscopic effect require complicated design challenges on naval ships
the idea of "swappable batteries" for the electric cars will become soon COMPLETELY UNNECESSARY since the new, 100+ times faster to recharge/discharge, Li-Ion batteries and the, 100+ times electric charge, supercapacitors (to be available soon) may solve ALL the existing problems to build and sell electric cars!!!
Imagine if government had set up policies that coerced us to build a battery swap infrastructure, and then advances like this obsoleted it in a few short years. All those resources would have been poorly applied.
This is so cool !
We have been working on electrochemical coatings of this sort at our lab in Milan.
First the alumina on the substrate is precisely patterned using lithography and then etching is performed using chemicals. Then the substrate with etched alumina is electrochemically coated with Copper or Nickle in a suitable bath.
This high density of charge storage opens up enormous applications for this technology...
This could turn out to be the Perfect marriage of the Capacitors and Batteries.
all this stuff is great in terms of new tech for truly enabling a viable generation of electric vehicles, etc but when the grid system that feeds such vehicles electricity is so inefficient and produces so much C02 whats the point? until the system changes we're better of with efficient combustion engines!
Here's the point.
Electrical power generation is far more efficient than internal combustion automotive engines. Losses in engery conversion in electic cars are low. Energy can be recovered from braking in electic cars. The overall result is a substantial reduction in fuel requirements.
The electrical grid can be fed by sources that do not produce CO2 such as nuclear, solar and wind.
Even if power to get from point a to point b using grid energy produces the same CO2 as ICE do today using gasoline and diesel, advances in solar, wind and other energy sources will supplement the our energy usage and offset CO2 in the future as newer technology is implemented
What really matter most is the cost to get from a to b. Since energy storage is a major factor, advances in storage capacity are exciting. Even more so if they mean a lower cost per unit of storage.
Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.
Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:
seamountie
19 Comments
Nanocapacitors
The other problem with capacitors is their ability to hold a charge is relatively short term - compared to batteries. Does this technique improve the "shelf life" of the charge?
Reply
Katherine Bourzac
27 Comments
Re: Nanocapacitors
Hi seamountie
Yes, compared with other nanostructured capacitors, the shelf life of charge is 40 times longer. I don't have a number for how this compares with batteries or commercial capacitors. My sources told me that this was not really the big news with this story since, as Joel Schindall from MIT said, "Storing charge longer is nice, but not too important for most applications (months instead of weeks, in practical terms)."
Reply