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Graphene Nanocomposite a Bridge to Better Batteries
by Aditi Risbud
Berkeley CA (SPX) Aug 01, 2011

Berkeley Lab researchers assembled alternating layers of graphene and tin to create a nanoscale composite. To create the composite material, a thin film of tin is deposited onto graphene. Next, another sheet of graphene is transferred on top of the tin film. This process is repeated to create a composite material, which is then heated to transform a tin film into a series of pillars. This change in height between graphene layers improves the electrode's performance. In addition, this accommodating behavior means the battery can be charged quickly and repeatedly without degrading.

Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have created a graphene and tin nanoscale composite material for high-capacity energy storage in renewable lithium ion batteries. By encapsulating tin between sheets of graphene, the researchers constructed a new, lightweight "sandwich" structure that should bolster battery performance.

"For an electric vehicle, you need a lightweight battery that can be charged quickly and holds its charge capacity after repeated cycling," says Yuegang Zhang, a staff scientist with Berkeley Lab's Molecular Foundry, in the Inorganic Nanostructures Facility, who led this research.

"Here, we've shown the rational design of a nanoscale architecture, which doesn't need an additive or binder to operate, to improve battery performance."

Graphene is a single-atom-thick, "chicken-wire" lattice of carbon atoms with stellar electronic and mechanical properties, far beyond silicon and other traditional semiconductor materials. Previous work on graphene by Zhang and his colleagues has emphasized electronic device applications.

In this study, the team assembled alternating layers of graphene and tin to create a nanoscale composite. To create the composite material, a thin film of tin is deposited onto graphene.

Next, another sheet of graphene is transferred on top of the tin film. This process is repeated to create a composite material, which is then heated to 300 Celsius (572 Fahrenheit) in a hydrogen and argon environment. During this heat treatment, the tin film transforms into a series of pillars, increasing the height of the tin layer.

"The formation of these tin nanopillars from a thin film is very particular to this system, and we find the distance between the top and bottom graphene layers also changes to accommodate the height change of the tin layer," says Liwen Ji, a post-doctoral researcher at the Foundry. Ji is the lead author and Zhang the corresponding author of a paper reporting the research in the journal Energy and Environmental Science.

The change in height between the graphene layers in these new nanocomposites helps during electrochemical cycling of the battery, as the volume change of tin improves the electrode's performance. In addition, this accommodating behavior means the battery can be charged quickly and repeatedly without degrading - crucial for rechargeable batteries in electric vehicles.

"We have a large battery program here at Berkeley Lab, where we are capable of making highly cyclable cells. Through our interactions in the Carbon Cycle 2.0 program, the Materials Science Division researchers benefit from quality battery facilities and personnel, along with our insights in what it takes to make a better electrode," says co-author Battaglia, program manager in the Advanced Energy Technology department of Berkeley Lab's Environmental and Energy Technologies Division.

"In return, we have an outlet for getting these requirements out to scientists developing the next generation of materials."

"Multilayer nanoassembly of Sn-nanopillar arrays sandwiched between graphene layers for high-capacity lithium storage," by Liwen Ji, Zhongkui Tan, Tevye Kuykendall, Eun Ji An, Yanbao Fu, Vincent Battaglia, and Yuegang Zhang, appears in Energy and Environmental Science and is available online here. Portions of this work at the Molecular Foundry were supported by DOE's Office of Science.

Information on Zhang's previous work with graphene for nanoscale electronic devices may be found here and here.




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Palo Alto, Calif. (UPI) Jul 26, 2011
U.S. researchers say they've invented a transparent, flexible lithium-ion battery with great potential for applications in cutting-edge consumer electronics. While partially transparent gadgets such as digital photo frames and cellphones with see-through keyboards have come to market, completely transparent e-book readers or cellphones have remained elusive because of one last hurdle, r ... read more


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