Boffins use super-high pressures to develop super battery
July 6th, 2010 - 6:06 pm ICT by ANILondon, July 6 (ANI): Washington State University researchers have used super-high pressures to create a compact, never-before-seen material that can store vast amounts of energy.
The research appears in the journal Nature Chemistry.
Lead author Choong-Shik Yoo, a WSU chemistry professor, said: “If you think about it, it is the most condensed form of energy storage outside of nuclear energy.”
The research is basic science, but Yoo says it shows it is possible to store mechanical energy into the chemical energy of a material with such strong chemical bonds.
Possible future applications include creating a new class of energetic materials or fuels, an energy storage device, super-oxidizing materials for destroying chemical and biological agents, and high-temperature superconductors.
The researchers created the material on the Pullman campus in a diamond anvil cell, a small, two-inch by three-inch-diameter device capable of producing extremely high pressures in a small space.
The cell contained xenon difluoride (XeF2), a white crystal used to etch silicon conductors, squeezed between two small diamond anvils.
At normal atmospheric pressure, the material’s molecules stay relatively far apart from each other. But as researchers increased the pressure inside the chamber, the material became a two-dimensional graphite-like semiconductor. The researchers eventually increased the pressure to more than a million atmospheres, comparable to what would be found halfway to the centre of the earth.
All this “squeezing,” as Yoo calls it, forced the molecules to make tightly bound three-dimensional metallic “network structures.” In the process, the huge amount of mechanical energy of compression was stored as chemical energy in the molecules’ bonds. (ANI)
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