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OKIsItJustMe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-24-11 02:47 PM
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Stevens Students Develop Cheaper, Greener, Alternative Energy Storage
http://buzz.stevens.edu/index.php/senior-design-biochar-2011

Stevens Students Develop Cheaper, Greener, Alternative Energy Storage

Every year, the world consumes 15 Terrawatts of power. Since the amount of annual harvestable solar energy has been estimated at 50 Terrawatts, students at Stevens Institute of Technology are working on a supercapacitor that will allow us to harness more of this renewable energy through biochar electrodes for supercapacitors, resulting in a cleaner, greener planet.

Supercapacitors are common today in solar panels and hydrogen fuel cell car batteries, but the material they use to store energy, activated carbon, is unsustainable and expensive. Biochar, on the other hand, represents a cheap, green alternative. The Chemical Engineering Senior Design team of Rachel Kenion, Liana Vaccari, and Katie Van Strander has designed biochar electrodes for supercapacitors, and is looking to eventually bring their solution to market. The group is advised by Dr. Woo Lee, the George Meade Bond Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science.

For their project, the team designed, fabricated, and tested a prototype supercapacitor electrode. The group demonstrated biochar's feasibility as an alternative to activated carbon for electrodes, which can be used in hybrid electric automobile batteries or home energy storage in solar panels.



Biochar is viewed as a green solution to the activated carbon currently used in supercapacitor electrodes. Unlike activated carbon, biochar is the byproduct of the pyrolysis process used to produce biofuels. That is, biochar comes from the burning of organic matter. As the use of biofuels increases, biochar production increases as well. "With our process, we are able to take that biochar and put it to good use in supercapacitors. Our supply comes from goldenrod crop, and through an IP-protected process, most organics, metals, and other impurities are removed. It is a more sustainable method of production than activated carbon," Liana says. Another significant advantage: biochar is nontoxic and will not pollute the soil when it is tossed out. The team estimates that biochar costs almost half as much as activated carbon, and is more sustainable because it reuses the waste from biofuel production, a process with sustainable intentions to begin with.

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ironrooster Donating Member (273 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-24-11 10:01 PM
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1. activated carbon isn't unsustainable - it's treated carbon by means of steam and pressure / nt
The steam and pressure (somewhat like a super duper autoclave) create "pores" in the carbon thus "activating" it. You can take
biochar and turn it into activated carbon. Activated carbon can be created by chemical means as well - but the steam method is the
more traditional.
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Confusious Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-25-11 03:39 AM
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2. The supercapacitor market in 2005 was 400 million
Edited on Wed May-25-11 03:42 AM by Confusious
Not that common.
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