An environmentally friendly battery made from wood
Taking inspiration from trees,
scientists have developed a battery made from a sliver of wood
coated with tin that shows promise for becoming a tiny, long-lasting, efficient and environmentally friendly energy source.
coated with tin that shows promise for becoming a tiny, long-lasting, efficient and environmentally friendly energy source.
“Tin Anode for Sodium-Ion
Batteries Using Natural Wood Fiber as a Mechanical Buffer and Electrolyte
Reservoir”
Nano Letters
Nano Letters
Taking inspiration from trees,
scientists have developed a battery made from a sliver of wood coated with tin
that shows promise for becoming a tiny, long-lasting, efficient and
environmentally friendly energy source. Their report on the device — 1,000
times thinner than a sheet of paper — appears in the journal Nano Letters.
Liangbing Hu, Teng Li and colleagues
point out that today’s batteries often use stiff, non-flexible substrates,
which are too rigid to release the stress that occurs as ions flow through the
battery. They knew that wood fibers from trees are supple and naturally
designed to hold mineral-rich water, similar to the electrolyte in batteries.
They decided to explore use of wood as the base of an experimental sodium-ion
battery. Using sodium rather than lithium would make the device environmentally
friendly.
Lead author Hongli Zhu and other
team members describe lab experiments in which the device performed
successfully though 400 charge-discharge cycles, putting it among the
longest-lasting of all sodium-ion nanobatteries. Batteries using the new
technology would be best suited for large-scale energy storage applications,
such as wind farms or solar energy installations, the report indicates.
The
authors acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation and the University
of Maryland NanoCenter.
ACS
News Service Weekly PressPac: June 19, 2013
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