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11-04 :: April/May 2011


nanotimes News in Brief


53


Battery Material // Technology Based on Iron-Carbon – For Accumulators of Much Higher Energy Density


Development of high-performance energy stores pre- sently is one of the biggest challenges of research, as they are the prerequisite for the economic efficiency of future electromobility and for the integration of renewable energies in the energy system. As regards batteries, it is worked on increasing the performance, sustainability, and safety. At the Institute of Nano- technology of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), a completely novel approach to battery ar- chitecture and use of materials has now been deve- loped, which promises enormous improvements in terms of the amount of energy stored and costs. This new approach might considerably increase the cruis- ing range of electric cars in the long term.


According to the state of the art, the amount of energy stored in a battery is smaller by a factor of 50 than the energy in a fuel tank of the same size. “Use of conventional lithium-ion battery materials is expected to allow for slight improvements only,” says Dr. Maximilian Fichtner, Head of the Energy Storage Group of the KIT Institute of Nanotechno- logy. To considerably enhance the performance, it was therefore necessary to develop completely new approaches to both the development of materials and battery architecture.


Fichtner and his team focused on entirely new iron- carbon materials, by means of which far more energy can be stored on smallest space. The problem: The


materials described so far do not have any cyclic stability and storage capacity decreases rapidly, if the battery is charged and discharged repeatedly.


The KIT Institute of Nanotechnology has therefore developed a new approach to the synthesis of iron- carbon storage materials. By means of the process, the patent of which has been applied for, metal organic materials are mixed with a lithium salt and heated up. As a result, an entirely new nanostruc- ture with simultaneously developing carbon wires forms. Nanoscaled storage units and conduction paths are generated quasi in one step.


The specific capacity of the new cathode material, i.e. its capability of storing energy, already is about twice that of current batteries. “This is the first exa- mple worldwide of a stable conversion material, by means of which far more electrons and lithium can be “packed” on small space than by conventional methods,” underlines Fichtner. ”Production is simple and inexpensive and the high capacity of the iron- carbon electrode is maintained for a long time. This is an enor-mous progress compared to materials used so far. If we succeed in fully exhausting the potenti- al of this new material, we can improve the storage density of lithium-ion batteries by the factor of 5,” says Fichtner.


http://www.kit.edu


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