Wednesday, May 28, 2014

New nanomaterial for longer battery life


An architecture nanostructured material has been recently developed by researchers at the University of California using nanocrystalline ruthenium oxide coupled with graphene. This technology could improve the quality of the supercapacitors leading to long lasting battery life in portable electronics.
 
The present study showed that two times more energy and power can be achieved with this material compared to commercial supercapacitors. The electrode and/or supercapacitors made with above mentioned nanomaterial can be cycled over 8000 times without any fatigue because of its high energy density. Nanostructured materials also rendered large surface area, high electrical conductivity, short ion diffusion pathways and excellent interfacial integrity, making these high energy supercapacitor electrodes ideal for future energy storage applications.

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