SHOPPING NEWS
KNOWLEDGE FROUM
  »Sign In »Sign Up Check OutCheck Out
0 Items(s) (US$0.0000)
  • All Topics
  • >>
  • Battery Industry
  • Submit a New Story
  • 1
  • dig it

Fuels Cells: New Material Increases Power Output By More Than 50 Percent

ScienceDaily (May 19, 2008) — MIT engineers have improved the power output of one type of fuel cell by more than 50 percent through technology that could help these environmentally friendly energy storage devices find a much broader market, particularly in portable electronics.

The new material key to the work is also considerably less expensive than its conventional industrial counterpart, among other advantages.

"Our goal is to replace traditional fuel-cell membranes with these cost-effective, highly tunable and better-performing materials," said Paula T. Hammond, Bayer Professor of Chemical Engineering and leader of the research team. She noted that the new material also has potential for use in other electrochemical systems such as batteries.

The work was reported in a recent issue of Advanced Materials by Hammond, Avni A. Argun and J. Nathan Ashcraft. Argun is a postdoctoral associate in chemical engineering; Ashcraft is a graduate student in the same department.

Like a battery, a fuel cell has three principal parts: two electrodes (a cathode and anode) separated by an electrolyte. Chemical reactions at the electrodes produce an electronic current that can be made to flow through an appliance connected to the battery or fuel cell. The principal difference between the two? Fuel cells get their energy from an external source of hydrogen fuel, while conventional batteries draw from a finite source in a contained system.

The MIT team focused on direct methanol fuel cells (DMFCs), in which the methanol is directly used as the fuel and reforming of alcohol down to hydrogen is not required. Such a fuel cell is attractive because the only waste products are water and carbon dioxide (the latter produced in small quantities). Also, because methanol is a liquid, it is easier to store and transport than hydrogen gas, and is safer (it won't explode). Methanol also has a high energy density-a little goes a long way, making it especially interesting for portable devices.

The DMFCs currently on the market, however, have limitations. For example, the material currently used for the electrolyte sandwiched between the electrodes is expensive. Even more important: that material, known as Nafion, is permeable to methanol, allowing some of the fuel to seep across the center of the fuel cell. Among other disadvantages, this wastes fuel-and lowers the efficiency of the cell-because the fuel isn't available for the reactions that generate electricity.

Using a relatively new technique known as layer-by-layer assembly, the MIT researchers created an alternative to Nafion. "We were able to tune the structure of [our] film a few nanometers at a time," Hammond said, getting around some of the problems associated with other approaches. The result is a thin film that is two orders of magnitude less permeable to methanol but compares favorably to Nafion in proton conductivity.

To test their creation, the engineers coated a Nafion membrane with the new film and incorporated the whole into a direct methanol fuel cell. The result was an increase in power output of more than 50 percent.

The team is now exploring whether the new film could be used by itself, completely replacing Nafion. To that end, they have been generating thin films that stand alone, with a consistency much like plastic wrap.

This work was supported by the DuPont-MIT Alliance through 2007. It is currently supported by the National Science Foundation.

In addition, Hammond and colleagues have begun exploring the new material's potential use in photovoltaics. That work is funded by the MIT Energy Initiative. T

 

Submitted:
162 days ago
Submitter:
hahaha
Topic:
Battery Industry
Source:
www.sciencedaily.com
  • Improved Ion Mobility Is Key To New Hydrogen Storage Compound
  • Microchip Sets Low-power Record With Extreme Sleep Mode
  • Fujitsu Releases Portable ScanSnap S300M
  • Sony Teases With Flagship Alpha Digital SLR
  • Kingston SD Card Hits 16GB
  • Sony Shows Hand-Powered Gadgets for Kids
 
ACER FOR Aspire 3610 Series lithiurnlon Laptop Replacement Battery BTP-63D1 4400mAh
Sample Price:US$51.6413
 
Apple iPod Video Lithium Ion iPod Replacement Battery 850mAh
Sample Price:US$4.3950
Comments (0)
  • Add Your Comment
  • Please login or register to submit your comment.
    • What are the benefits of having a Dig account?
    • Share your opinion by posting comments on the stories that interest you
    • Dig the stories that you like and help determine what should be popular on Digg
    • Create a network of friends, so you can help each other find interesting stories
    • Start building a history of content that you've Dugg, for easy reference later
 
Apple iPod 1st Generation Lithium Ion iPod Replacement Battery 1600mAh
Sample Price:US$10.9875
 
Apple iPod 2nd Generation Lithium Ion iPod Replacement Battery 2200mAh
Sample Price:US$12.1595
CUSTOMER SERVICE SHOPPING HELP MY ACCOUNT COMPANY INFO TOOLS & RESOURCES
  • Contact Us
  • RMA Request
  • Looking for a item
  • Send Us a Message
  • Shopping Process
  • Return Policy 
  • FAQs
  • Knowledge Base
  • Login/Register
  • My Account
  • Order History
  • My Wish list
  • About Us
  • Wholesale News
  • Customer Comments
  • Site Map
  • Downloads
  • Search
  • Links

visamastercarddiscoverecheckamexpaypalPayPal Verified

Policies | Privacy Notice | Copyright © 2006 China Batteries Wholesaler Inc. All rights reserved.