Low-cost Supercapacitor from Industrial
Waste Cotton & Natural Seawater Electrolyte can help Energy Storage
[DST Press
Release/14.07.2020]
Scientists at the International
Advanced Research Centre for Powder Metallurgy and New Materials (ARCI), an autonomous
organization of the Department of Science and Technology, Govt. of India have developed
a simple, low-cost, environmentally friendly, and sustainable supercapacitor electrode derived from industrial waste cotton
which can be used as an energy harvester storage device. For the first time, natural
seawater is explored as an environmentally friendly, cost-effective, scalable, and
alternative aqueous electrolyte, which may replace the existing aqueous-based electrolytes
for the economic fabrication of supercapacitor.
Supercapacitor is a next-generation energy storage device that
has received extensive research attention owing to advantages such as high power
density, long durability, and ultrafast charging characteristic as compared to conventional
capacitors and lithium-ion batteries (LIB). Among the four main components of supercapacitor
electrode, electrolyte, separator, and the current collector, the first two are
the pivotal components, which directly determine the electrochemical behaviour of the supercapacitors.
The fabrication cost of electrode materials, as well as electrolytes, should be
reduced because these two components account for major portion of the device manufacturing
cost.
In search of a cost-effective
material for making affordable supercapacitor devices,
scientists at ARCI have converted industrial waste cotton (Trash) into highly
porous carbon fibers (Treasure) by activation process and then utilised the porous carbon fibers to make high-performance supercapacitor electrodes.
In the recent research published
in Energy Technology, scientists at ARCI demonstrated the feasibility of
using seawater as natural electrolyte for the fabrication of aqueous-based supercapacitor devices which shows great potential for practical
implementation. The study found that natural seawater-based supercapacitor
exhibited maximum capacitances at a current density of 1 Ag-1. In addition,
seawater-based supercapacitor shows very good durability
upon 10,000 charge-discharge cycles with 99% of capacitance retention and 99 % of
Coulombic efficiency (efficiency with which charge is
transferred in a system facilitating an electrochemical reaction).
The research team’s new, sustainable
and green supercapacitor device shows great potential
for practical application, and perhaps most importantly, the integrated solar
cell with seawater-based supercapacitor as low cost, eco-friendly,
efficient and self-powering device. The successful demonstration of the device
revealed that solar-powered supercapacitors can not only
store the electrical energy but also overcome the drawbacks of the intermittent
nature of the solar irradiation. Hence, the integrated solar cell with supercapacitor can be used as an energy harvester storage device
due to their long cycle life and maintenance-free power supply.
“The large-scale use of renewable
energy requires creation of matching capacity for inexpensive electrical energy
storage. This study provides a solution for fabrication of super-capacitors from
such abundant materials as waste cotton and seawater! It is an excellent example
of the creative science for the sustainable, green processes embedding principles
of waste-to-wealth,” said Prof Ashutosh Sharma, Secretary,
DST.