Ultracapacitor Seminar Report
Ultracapacitor Seminar Report
Ultracapacitor Seminar Report
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
General Electric engineers experimenting with devices using porous carbon electrodes first observed the EDLC effect in 1957. They believed that the energy was stored in the carbon pores and the device exhibited "exceptionally high capacitance", although the mechanism was unknown at that time. General Electric did not immediately follow up on this work. In 1966 researchers at Standard Oil of Ohio developed the modern version of the devices, after they accidentally re-discovered the effect while working on experimental fuel cell designs.[6] Their cell design used two layers of activated charcoal separated by a thin porous insulator, and this basic mechanical design remains the basis of most electric double-layer capacitors. Standard Oil also failed to commercialize their invention, licensing the technology to NEC, who finally marketed the results as supercapacitors in 1978, to provide backup power for maintaining computer memory. The market expanded slowly for a time, but starting around the mid-1990s various advances in materials science and refinement of the existing systems led to rapidly improving performance and an equally rapid reduction in cost. The first trials of supercapacitors in industrial applications were carried out for supporting the energy supply to robots. In 2005 aerospace systems and controls company Diehl Luftfahrt Elektronik chose supercapacitors to power emergency actuation systems for doors and evacuation slides in airliners, including the new Airbus 380 jumbo jet. In 2005, the ultracapacitor market was between US $272 million and $400 million, depending on the source. As of 2007 all solid state micrometer-scale electric double-layer capacitors based on advanced superionic conductors had been for low-voltage electronics such as deep-sub-voltage nanoelectronics and related technologies (the 22 nm technological node of CMOS and beyond).
ULTRA CAPACITOR
The electrochemical ultracapacitor is an emerging technology that promises to play an important role in meeting the demands of electronic devices and systems both now and in the future. This newly available technology of ultracapacitors is making it easier for engineers to balance their use of both energy and power. Energy storage devices like ultracapacitors are normally used along with batteries to compensate for the limited battery power capability. Evidently, the proper control of the energy storage systems presents both a challenge and opportunity for the power and energy management system. This paper traces the history of the development of the technology and explores the principles and theory of operation of the ultracapacitors. The use of ultracapacitors in various applications are discussed and their advantages over alternative technologies are considered. To provide examples with which to outline practical implementation issues, systems incorporating ultracapacitors as vital components are also explored. This paper has aimed to provide a brief overview of ultracapacitor technology as it stands today. Previous development efforts have been described to place the current state of the technology within an historical context. Scientific background has also been covered in order to better understand performance characteristics. Possible applications of ultracapacitor technology have also been described to illustrate the wide range of possibilities that exist. Because of the advantages of charging efficiency, long lifetime, fast response, and wide operating temperature range, it is tempting to try and apply ultracapacitors to any application that requires energy storage. The limitations of the current technology must be fully appreciated, however, and it is important to realize that ultracapacitors are only useful within a finite range of energy and power requirements. Outside of these boundaries other alternatives are likely to be the better solution. The most important thing to remember about ultracapacitors technology is that it is a new and different technology in its own right.
ULTRA CAPACITOR
CHAPTER 2 CONCEPT
Comparison of construction diagrams of three capacitors. Left: "normal" capacitor, middle: electrolytic, right: electric double-layer capacitor In a conventional capacitor, energy is stored by the removal of charge carriers, typically electrons, from one metal plate and depositing them on another. This charge separation creates a potential between the two plates, which can be harnessed in an external circuit. The total energy stored in this fashion is proportional to both the amount of charge stored and the potential between the plates. The amount of charge stored per unit voltage is essentially a function of the size, the distance, and the material properties of the plates and the material in between the plates (the dielectric), while the potential between the plates is limited by breakdown of the dielectric. The dielectric controls the capacitor's voltage.
ULTRA CAPACITOR
Optimizing the material leads to higher energy density for a given size of capacitor. EDLCs do not have a conventional dielectric. Rather than two separate plates separated by an intervening substance, these capacitors use "plates" that are in fact two layers of the same substrate, and their electrical properties, the so-called "electrical double layer", result in the effective separation of charge despite the vanishingly thin (on the order of nanometers) physical separation of the layers. The lack of need for a bulky layer of dielectric permits the packing of plates with much larger surface area into a given size, resulting in high capacitances in practicalsized packages. In an electrical double layer, each layer by itself is quite conductive, but the physics at the interface where the layers are effectively in contact means that no significant current can flow between the layers. However, the double layer can withstand only a low voltage, which means that electric double-layer capacitors rated for higher voltages must be made of matched series-connected individual EDLCs, much like series-connected cells in highervoltage batteries. EDLCs have much higher power density than batteries. Power density combines the energy density with the speed that the energy can be delivered to the load. Batteries, which are based on the movement of charge carriers in a liquid electrolyte, have relatively slow charge and discharge times. Capacitors, on the other hand, can be charged or discharged at a rate that is typically limited by current heating of the electrodes. So while existing EDLCs have energy densities that are perhaps 1/10 that of a conventional battery, their power density is generally 10 to 100 times as great (see diagram, right).
ULTRA CAPACITOR
The capacitor then evolved into an electrostatic capacitor where the electrodes were made up of foils and separated by paper that served as the dielectric. These capacitors are used in the electronic circuit boards of a number of consumer applications. Here the surface area of one electrode was increased by etching the electrode to roughen it, reducing the thickness of the dielectric and using a paste-like electrolyte to form the second electrode. An ultracapacitor however has a significantly larger storage area. Ultracapacitors are made with highly porous carbon materials. These materials have the capability of increased surface areas ranging greater than 21,500 square feet per gram. The separation distance between the charged plates is reduced significantly to nanometers (10(-9) cm) in the ultracapacitors by using electrolytes to conduct the charged ions . Although they are compared to batteries from the application perspective, ultracapacitors are unique because there are no chemical reactions involved. They are considered efficient as they can quickly store and release electrical energy in the physical form.
ULTRA CAPACITOR
The charge-storage mechanism and the design of the ultracapacitor are described. Based on a ceramic with an extremely high specific surface area and a metallic substrate, the ultracapacitor provides extremely high energy density and exhibits low ESR (equivalent series resistance). The combination of low ESR and extremely low inductance provides the ultracapacitor with a very high power density and fast rise time as well. As a double-layer capacitor, the ultracapacitor is not constrained by the same limitations as dielectric capacitors. Thus, although its discharge characteristics and equivalent circuit are similar to those of dielectric capacitors, the capacitance of the ultracapacitor increases with the ceramic loading on the substrate and its ESR is inversely proportional to the cross-sectional area of the device. Ultracapacitor is composed of an inline stack of electrodes, which leads to an extremely low inductance device, and it exhibits interesting frequency dependence. The ultracapacitor principle has been extended to nonaqueous electrolytes and to a wide temperature range .
ULTRA CAPACITOR
General Electric engineers experimenting with devices using porous carbon electrodes first observed the EDLC effect in 1957. They believed that the energy was stored in the carbon pores and the device exhibited "exceptionally high capacitance", although the mechanism was unknown at that time. General Electric did not immediately follow up on this work. In 1966 researchers at Standard Oil of Ohio developed the modern version of the devices, after they accidentally rediscovered the effect while working on experimental fuel cell designs. Their cell design used two layers of activated charcoal separated by a thin porous insulator, and this basic mechanical design remains the basis of most electric double-layer capacitors. Standard Oil did not commercialize their invention, licensing the technology to NEC, who finally marketed the results as supercapacitors in 1978, to provide backup power for maintaining computer memory. The market expanded slowly for a time, but starting around the mid-1990s various advances in materials science and refinement of the existing systems led to rapidly improving performance and an equally rapid reduction in cost. The first trials of supercapacitors in industrial applications were carried out for supporting the energy supply to robots. In 2005 aerospace systems and controls company Diehl Luftfahrt Elektronik GmbH chose supercapacitors to power emergency actuation systems for doors and evacuation slides inairliners, including the new Airbus 380 jumbo jet. In 2005, the ultracapacitor market was between US $272 million and $400 million, depending on the source.
ULTRA CAPACITOR
CHAPTER 5 MATERIALS
In general, EDLCs improve storage density through the use of a nanoporous material, typically activated charcoal, in place of the conventional insulating barrier. Activated charcoal is a powder made up of extremely small and very "rough" particles, which, in bulk, form a lowdensity heap with many holes that resembles a sponge. The overall surface area of even a thin layer of such a material is many times greater than a traditional material like aluminum, allowing many more charge carriers (ions or radicals from the electrolyte) to be stored in any given volume. The charcoal, which is not a good insulator, replaces the excellent insulators used in conventional devices, so in general EDLCs can only use low potentials on the order of 2 to 3 V. Activated charcoal is not the "perfect" material for this application. The charge carriers are actually (in effect) quite largeespecially when surrounded by solventmoleculesand are often larger than the holes left in the charcoal, which are too small to accept them, limiting the storage. As of 2010 virtually all commercial supercapacitors use powdered activated carbon made from coconut shells. Higher performance devices are available, at a significant cost increase, based on synthetic carbon precursors that are activated with potassium hydroxide (KOH).
Research in EDLCs focuses on improved materials that offer higher usable surface areas.
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Graphene has excellent surface area per unit of gravimetric or volumetric densities, is highly conductive and can now be produced in various labs, but is not available in production quantities. Specific energy density of 85.6 Wh/kg at room temperature and 136 Wh/kg at 80 C (all based on the total electrode weight), measured at a current density of 1 A/g have been observed. These energy density values are comparable to that of the Nickel metal hydride battery.
The device makes full utilization of the highest intrinsic surface capacitance and specific surface area of single-layer graphene by preparing curved graphene sheets that do not restack face-to-face. The curved shape enables the formation of mesopores accessible to and wettable by environmentally benign ionic liquids capable of operating at a voltage V>4V.
Carbon nanotubes have excellent nanoporosity properties, allowing tiny spaces for the polymer to sit in the tube and act as a dielectric. [13] Carbon nanotubes can store about the same charge as charcoal (which is almost pure carbon) per unit surface area but nanotubes can be arranged in a more regular pattern that exposes greater suitable surface area.
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FIG 5.1: Ragone chart showing energy density vs.power density for various energy-storage
devices.
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Some polymers (e.g. polyacenes and conducting polymers) have a redox (reductionoxidation) storage mechanism along with a high surface area.
Carbon aerogel provides extremely high surface area gravimetric densities of about 400 1000 m/g. The electrodes of aerogel supercapacitors are a composite material usually made of nonwoven paper made from carbon fibers and coated with organic aerogel, which then undergoes pyrolysis. The carbon fibers provide structural integrity and the aerogel provides the required large surface area. Small aerogel supercapacitors are being used as backup electricity storage in microelectronics.
Aerogel capacitors can only work at a few volts; higher voltages ionize the carbon and damage the capacitor. Carbon aerogel capacitors have achieved 325 J/g (90 Wh/kg) energy density and 20 W/g power density.
Solid activated carbon, also termed consolidated amorphous carbon (CAC). It can have a surface area exceeding 2800 m2/g and may be cheaper to produce than aerogel carbon. [16]
Tunable nanoporous carbon exhibits systematic pore size control. H2 adsorption treatment can be used to increase the energy density by as much as 75% over what was commercially available as of 2005.
Mineral-based carbon is a nonactivated carbon, synthesised from metal or metalloid carbides, e.g. SiC, TiC, Al4C3. The synthesised nanostructured porous carbon, often called Carbide Derived Carbon (CDC), has a surface area of about 400 m/g to 2000 m/g with a specific capacitance of up to 100 F/mL (in organic electrolyte).
As of 2006 this material was used in a supercapacitor with a volume of 135 mL and 200 g weight having 1.6 kF capacitance. The energy density is more than 47 kJ/L at 2.85 V and power density of over 20 W/g.
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In August 2007 researchers combined a biodegradable paper battery with aligned carbon nanotubes, designed to function as both a lithium-ion battery and a supercapacitor (called bacitor). The device employed an ionic liquid, essentially a liquid salt, as the electrolyte. The paper sheets can be rolled, twisted, folded, or cut with no loss of integrity or efficiency, or stacked, like ordinary paper (or a voltaic pile), to boost total output.
They can be made in a variety of sizes, from postage stamp to broadsheet. Their light weight and low cost make them attractive for portable electronics, aircraft, automobiles, and toys (such as model aircraft), while their ability to use electrolytes in blood make them potentially useful for medical devices such as pacemakers.
Other teams are experimenting with custom materials made of activated polypyrrole, and nanotube-impregnated papers.
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The energy density of existing commercial EDLCs ranges from around 0.5 to 30 Wh/kg including lithium ion capacitors, known also as a "hybrid capacitor". Experimental electric double-layer capacitors have demonstrated densities of 30 Wh/kg and have been shown to be scalable to at least 136 Wh/kg, while others expect to offer energy densities of about 400 Wh/kg. For comparison, a conventional lead-acid battery stores typically 30 to 40 Wh/kg and modern lithium-ion batteries about 160 Wh/kg. Gasoline has a net calorific value (NCV) of around 12,000 Wh/kg; automobile applications operate at about 20% tank-to-wheel efficiency, giving an effective energy density of 2,400 Wh/kg.
In the past we are already familiar with battery technologies and how their characteristics may or may not be suitable for microgrids. Batteries are suitable for applications where we need an energy delivery profile. For example, to feed a load during the night when the only source is PV modules. However, batteries are not suitable for applications with power delivery profiles. For example, to assist a slow load-following fuel cell in delivering power to a constantly and fast changing load. For this last application, two technologies seem to be more appropriate: Ultracapacitors (electric energy)
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Other energy storage technologies not discussed in here are superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES magnetic energy) and compressed air (or some other gas - mechanical energy)
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Low internal resistance in comparison with batteries High power density due to high discharge currents Ability to operate at temperatures as low as -40C Effective capacitance for specific pulse widths Low equivalent series resistance (ESR) Higher cycle life, making them suitable for automotive applications High specific power. According to ITS (Institute of Transportation Studies, Davis, California) test results, the specific power of electric double-layer capacitors can exceed 6 kW/kg at 95% efficiency.
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CHAPTER 9 ADVANTAGES
Long life, with little degradation over hundreds of thousands of charge cycles. Due to the capacitor's high number of charge-discharge cycles (millions or more compared to 200 to 1000 for most commercially available rechargeable batteries) it will last for the entire lifetime of most devices, which makes the device environmentally friendly. Rechargeable batteries wear out typically over a few years, and their highly reactive chemical electrolytes present a disposal and safety hazard. Battery lifetime can be optimised by charging only under favorable conditions, at an ideal rate and, for some chemistries, as infrequently as possible. EDLCs can help in conjunction with batteries by acting as a charge conditioner, storing energy from other sources for load balancing purposes and then using any excess energy to charge the batteries at a suitable time.
Low cost per cycle. Good reversibility. Very high rates of charge and discharge. Extremely low internal resistance (ESR) and consequent high cycle efficiency (95% or more) and extremely low heating levels. High output power.
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CHAPTER 10 DISADVANTAGES
The amount of energy stored per unit weight is generally lower than that of an electrochemical battery (35 Wh/kg for an standard ultracapacitor, although 85 Wh/kg has been achieved in the lab as of 2010 compared to 30-40 Wh/kg for a lead acid battery), and about 1/1,000th the volumetric energy density of gasoline.
Typical of any capacitor, the voltage varies with the energy stored. Effective storage and recovery of energy requires complex electronic control and switching equipment, with consequent energy loss.
Has the highest dielectric absorption of any type of capacitor. High self-discharge - the rate is considerably higher than that of an electrochemical battery. Cells hold low voltages - serial connections are needed to obtain higher voltages. Voltage balancing is required if more than three capacitors are connected in series. Linear discharge voltage prevents use of the full energy spectrum. Due to rapid and large release of energy (albeit over short times), EDLC's have the potential to be deadly to humans.
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CHAPTER 11 APPLICATIONS
Some of the earliest uses were motor startup capacitors for large engines in tanks and submarines, and as the cost has fallen they have started to appear on diesel trucks and railroad locomotives. In the 00's they attracted attention in the green energy world, where their ability to charge much faster than batteries makes them particularly suitable for regenerative braking applications. New technology in development could potentially make EDLCs with high enough energy density to be an attractive replacement for batteries in all-electric cars and plug-in hybrids, as EDLCs charge quickly and are stable with respect to temperature. China is experimenting with a new form of electric bus (capabus) that runs without powerlines using large onboard EDLCs, which quickly recharge whenever the bus is at any bus stop (under so-called electric umbrellas), and fully charge in the terminus. A few prototypes were being tested in Shanghai in early 2005. In 2006, two commercial bus routes began to use electric double-layer capacitor buses; one of them is route 11 in Shanghai. In 2001 and 2002 VAG, the public transport operator in Nuremberg, Germany tested an hybrid bus that uses a diesel-electric battery drive system with electric double-layer capacitors. Since 2003 Mannheim Stadtbahn in Mannheim, Germany has operated a light-rail vehicle (LRV) that uses EDLCs to store braking energy. Other public transport manufacturers are developing EDLC technology, including mobile storage[33] and a stationary trackside power supply. A triple hybrid forklift truck uses fuel cells and batteries as primary energy storage.
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11.1 Automotive
Ultracapacitors are used in some concept prototype vehicles, in order to keep batteries within resistive heating limits and extend battery life. The ultrabattery combines a supercapacitor and a battery in one unit, creating an electric vehicle battery that lasts longer, costs less and is more powerful than current plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs).
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CHAPTER 12 PRICE
Costs have fallen quickly, with cost per kilojoule dropping faster than cost per farad. As of 2006 the cost of ultracapacitors was 1 cent per farad and $2.85 per kilojoule, and was expected to drop further.
CHAPTER 13 MARKET
According to Innovative Research and Products (iRAP), ultracapacitor market growth will continue during 2009 to 2014. Worldwide business, over US$275 million in 2009, will continue to grow at an AAGR of 21.4% through 2014.
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CHAPTER 14 CHALLENGES
1. The foremost challenge is from traditional batteries such as the lead acid, lithium ion, nickel
cadmium (NiCD), nickel metal hydride (NiMH) and others which existed in the market for more than hundred years 2. Equivalent Series Resistance values can be optimized only with efficient packaging of the ultracapacitor 3. Cost of raw materials are significantly high and plays an important role in the pricing of ultracapacitors 4. Adoption rates are only gradually increasing as end-users realize the benefits of ultracapacitors
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CHAPTER 15 CONCLUSION
Ultra capacitors have many advantages over traditional electrochemical batteries. Unlike batteries, "ultra caps" can completely absorb and release a charge at high rates and in a virtually endless cycle with little degradation. Where they're weak, however, is with energy storage. Compared with lithium-ion batteries, high-end ultracapacitors on the market today store 25 times less energy per pound. This is why ultra capacitors, with their ability to release quick jolts of electricity and to absorb this energy just as fast, are ideal today as a complement to batteries or fuel cells in electric-drive vehicles. The power burst that ultra caps provide can assist with stopstart acceleration, and the energy is more efficiently recaptured through regenerative braking--an area in which ultracap maker Maxwell Technologies has seen significant results. In future it will replace the batteries.
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CHAPTER 16 REFERENCES
Article on ultracapacitors at electronicdesign.com Article on ultracapacitors at batteryuniversity.com A new version of an old idea is threatening the battery industry (The Economist). An Encyclopedia Article From the Yeager center at CWRU.
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