Technique could turn any surface into a lithium-ion battery;
may be combined with solar cells
HOUSTON, Texas, June 28, 2012 - Researchers at
Rice University have developed a lithium-ion battery that can be
painted on virtually any surface.
The rechargeable battery created in the lab of Rice materials
scientist Pulickel Ajayan consists of spray-painted layers, each
representing the components in a traditional battery. The research
appears today in Nature's online, open-access journal Scientific
Reports.
"This means traditional packaging for batteries has given way to
a much more flexible approach that allows all kinds of new design
and integration possibilities for storage devices," said Ajayan,
Rice's Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor in
Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and of chemistry.
"There has been lot of interest in recent times in creating
power sources with an improved form factor, and this is a big step
forward in that direction."
Lead author Neelam Singh, a Rice graduate student, and her team
spent painstaking hours formulating, mixing and testing paints for
each of the five layered components - two current collectors, a
cathode, an anode and a polymer separator in the middle.
The materials were airbrushed onto ceramic bathroom tiles,
flexible polymers, glass, stainless steel and even a beer stein to
see how well they would bond with each substrate.
In the first experiment, nine bathroom tile-based batteries were
connected in parallel. One was topped with a solar cell that
converted power from a white laboratory light. When fully charged
by both the solar panel and house current, the batteries alone
powered a set of light-emitting diodes that spelled out "RICE" for
six hours; the batteries provided a steady 2.4 volts.
The researchers reported that the hand-painted batteries were
remarkably consistent in their capacities, within plus or minus 10
percent of the target. They were also put through 60
charge-discharge cycles with only a very small drop in capacity,
Singh said.
Each layer is an optimized stew. The first, the positive current
collector, is a mixture of purified single-wall carbon nanotubes
with carbon black particles dispersed in N-methylpyrrolidone.
The second is the cathode, which contains lithium cobalt oxide,
carbon and ultrafine graphite (UFG) powder in a binder
solution.
The third is the polymer separator paint of Kynar Flex resin,
PMMA and silicon dioxide dispersed in a solvent mixture. The
fourth, the anode, is a mixture of lithium titanium oxide and UFG
in a binder, and the final layer is the negative current collector,
a commercially available conductive copper paint, diluted with
ethanol.
"The hardest part was achieving mechanical stability, and the
separator played a critical role," Singh said. "We found that the
nanotube and the cathode layers were sticking very well, but if the
separator was not mechanically stable, they would peel off the
substrate. Adding PMMA gave the right adhesion to the separator."
Once painted, the tiles and other items were infused with the
electrolyte and then heat-sealed and charged.
Singh said the batteries were easily charged with a small solar
cell. She foresees the possibility of integrating paintable
batteries with recently reported paintable solar cells to create an
energy-harvesting combination that would be hard to beat.
As good as the hand-painted batteries are, she said, scaling up
with modern methods will improve them by leaps and bounds. "Spray
painting is already an industrial process, so it would be very easy
to incorporate this into industry," Singh said.
The Rice researchers have filed for a patent on the technique,
which they will continue to refine. Singh said they are actively
looking for electrolytes that would make it easier to create
painted batteries in the open air, and they also envision their
batteries as snap-together tiles that can be configured in any
number of ways.
"We really do consider this a paradigm changer," she said.
The Advanced Energy Consortium, the National Science Foundation
Partnerships for International Research and Education, Army
Research Laboratories and Nanoholdings Inc. supported the
research.
Watch a
video about Rice's paintable batteries
Read the paper at nature.com