14-08-2012, 04:58 PM
Supercapacitor
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A supercapacitor or ultracapacitor is an electrochemical capacitor that has an unusually high energy density when compared to common capacitors. They are of particular interest in automotive applications for hybrid vehicles and as supplementary storage for battery electric vehicles.
History
The first supercapacitor based on a double layer mechanism was developed in 1957 by General Electric using a porous carbon electrode [Becker, H.I., “Low voltage electrolytic capacitor”, U.S. Patent 2800616, 23 July 1957]. It was believed that the energy was stored in the carbon pores and it exhibited "exceptionally high capacitance", although the mechanism was unknown at that time. It was the Standard Oil Company, Cleveland (SOHIO) in 1966 that patented a device that stored energy in the double layer interface [Rightmire, R.A., “Electrical energy storage apparatus”, U.S. Patent 3288641, 29 Nov 1966.].
Current State
One of the earliest commercial-grade Electronic solutions powered by a single SuperCapacitor (a high-quality Audio mixer) was described in the milestone article "Single capacitor powers audio mixer" authored by Alexander Bell (EDN, March 14, 1997). A carefully designed circuit, which utilized micro-power amplifiers and Farad-range supercapacitor (SuperCap™ or DynaCap™) was capable of running for more than 2 hours on a single charge. It also demonstrated the ability to be charged very fast (in about ten seconds) compared to the hours required for traditional rechargeable batteries. Due to the capacitor's high number of charge-discharge cycles (millions or more compared to 200-1000 for most commercially available rechargeable batteries) there were no disposable parts during the whole operating life of the device, which made the solution very environmentally friendly.
The idea of replacing batteries with capacitors in conjunction with novel alternative energy sources became a conceptual umbrella of “Green Electricity (GEL) Initiative, introduced by Dr. Alexander Bell. One particular successful implementation of the “GEL Initiative” concept was introduced in the article: “Muscle power drives battery-free electronics” (Alexander Bell, EDN, 11/21/2005), describing muscle-driven autonomous, environmentally-friendly solution, which employs a multi-Farad supercapacitor (hecto- and kilo-Farad range capacitors are now widely available) as intermediate energy storage to power the variety of portable electrical and electronic devices (MP3 players, AM/FM radios, flashlights, cell-phones, emergency kits, etc.). As the energy density of supercapacitors (or ultracapacitors - these two terms can be used interchangeably) is bridging the gap with batteries, it could be expected that in the near future the automotive industry will implement ultracapacitors as a replacement for chemical batteries.
Applications in Public Transport
China is experimenting with a new form of electric bus that runs without powerlines using power stored in large onboard supercapacitors, which are quickly recharged whenever the electric bus stops at any bus stop, and get fully charged in the terminus. A few prototypes were being tested in Shanghai in early 2005. In 2006, two commercial bus routes began to use supercapacitor buses, one of them is route 11 in Shanghai.
In 2001 and 2002, VAG, the public transport operator in Nuremburg, Germany tested a bus which used a diesel-electric drive system with supercapacitors
Technology
Carbon nanotubes and certain conductive polymers, or carbon aerogels, are practical for supercapacitors. Carbon nanotubes have excellent nanoporosity properties, allowing tiny spaces for the polymer to sit in the tube and act as a dielectric. Some polymers (eg. polyacenes) have a redox (reduction-oxidation) storage mechanism along with a high surface area. MIT's Laboratory of Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems (LEES) is researching using carbon nanotubes [1].