Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Murata Releases Worlds First 10µF/50V Automotive MLCC in 0805 Size

    Würth Elektronik Extends High Saturation Flat-Wire Power Inductors Line

    Vishay Expands Automotive High Frequency Thin Film Chip Resistors

    Advancements and Applications of Switch Capacitor Power Converters

    KYOCERA AVX Releases Robust Vertical-Mating Battery Connectors

    Accelerating Full Bridge LLC Resonant Converter Design with Frenetic AI

    Samsung Delivers Silicon Capacitors to Marwell AI Systems

    Stackpole Releases Low VCR High Voltage Chip Resistors

    June 2025 Interconnect, Passives and Electromechanical Components Market Insights

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Accelerating Full Bridge LLC Resonant Converter Design with Frenetic AI

    Understanding Switched Capacitor Converters

    Coupled Inductors Circuit Model and Examples of its Applications

    Inductor Resonances and its Impact to EMI

    Highly Reliable Flex Rigid PCBs, Würth Elektronik Webinar

    Causes of Oscillations in Flyback Converters

    How to design a 60W Flyback Transformer

    Modeling and Simulation of Leakage Inductance

    Power Inductor Considerations for AI High Power Computing – Vishay Video

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • Events
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Murata Releases Worlds First 10µF/50V Automotive MLCC in 0805 Size

    Würth Elektronik Extends High Saturation Flat-Wire Power Inductors Line

    Vishay Expands Automotive High Frequency Thin Film Chip Resistors

    Advancements and Applications of Switch Capacitor Power Converters

    KYOCERA AVX Releases Robust Vertical-Mating Battery Connectors

    Accelerating Full Bridge LLC Resonant Converter Design with Frenetic AI

    Samsung Delivers Silicon Capacitors to Marwell AI Systems

    Stackpole Releases Low VCR High Voltage Chip Resistors

    June 2025 Interconnect, Passives and Electromechanical Components Market Insights

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Accelerating Full Bridge LLC Resonant Converter Design with Frenetic AI

    Understanding Switched Capacitor Converters

    Coupled Inductors Circuit Model and Examples of its Applications

    Inductor Resonances and its Impact to EMI

    Highly Reliable Flex Rigid PCBs, Würth Elektronik Webinar

    Causes of Oscillations in Flyback Converters

    How to design a 60W Flyback Transformer

    Modeling and Simulation of Leakage Inductance

    Power Inductor Considerations for AI High Power Computing – Vishay Video

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result

Right Selection of Electrolyte Doubles Energy Storage Capability

5.3.2019
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A

Source: Electric Vehicles Research article

Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Drexel University and their partners have discovered a way to improve the energy density of promising energy-storage materials, conductive two-dimensional ceramics called MXenes.

RelatedPosts

Murata Releases Worlds First 10µF/50V Automotive MLCC in 0805 Size

Würth Elektronik Extends High Saturation Flat-Wire Power Inductors Line

Vishay Expands Automotive High Frequency Thin Film Chip Resistors

The findings are published in Nature Energy. For more information see the IDTechEx report on Advanced Li-ion and Beyond Li-ion Batteries 2018-2028.

Today’s batteries, which rely on charge stored in the bulk of their electrodes, offer high energy-storage capacity, but slow charging speeds limit their application in consumer electronics and electric vehicles. Tomorrow’s energy-storage mainstays may be electrochemical capacitors, known as supercapacitors, which store charge at the surface of their electrode material for fast charging and discharging.

However, at present supercapacitors lack the charge-storage capacity, or energy density, of batteries. “The energy storage community is conservative, using the same few electrolyte solvents for all supercapacitors,” said principal investigator Yury Gogotsi, a Drexel University professor who planned the study with his postdoctoral researcher Xuehang Wang.

“New electrode materials like MXenes require electrolyte solvents that match their chemistry and properties.” The surfaces of different MXenes can be covered with diverse terminal groups, including oxygen, fluorine or hydroxyl species, which interact strongly and specifically with different solvents and dissolved salts in the electrolyte. A good electrolyte solvent-electrode match may then increase charging speed or boost storage capacity.

“Our study showed that the energy density of supercapacitors based on two-dimensional MXene materials can be significantly increased by choosing the appropriate solvent for the electrolyte,” added co-author Lukas Vlcek of the University of Tennessee, who conducts research in UT and ORNL’s Joint Institute for Computational Sciences. “By simply changing the solvent, we can double the charge storage.”

The work was part of the Fluid Interface Reactions, Structures and Transport (FIRST) Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center led by ORNL and supported by the DOE Office of Science. FIRST research explores fluid-solid interface reactions with consequences for energy transport in everyday applications.

Drexel’s Ke Li synthesized the titanium carbide MXene from a parent “MAX” ceramic—containing titanium (denoted by “M”), aluminum (“A”) and carbon (“X”)—by etching out the aluminum layers to form five-ply MXene monolayers of titanium carbide. Subsequently, the researchers soaked the MXenes in lithium-based electrolytes in various solvents with dramatically different molecular structures and properties.

The electrical charge was carried by lithium ions that easily insert themselves between MXene layers. Transmission electron microscopy revealed the structural integrity of the materials before and after electrochemical experiments, whereas X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy characterized the MXene’s composition and the chemical interactions between the MXene surface and the electrolyte solvent.

Electrochemical measurements showed that the maximum capacitance (amount of energy stored) was achieved using a less conductive electrolyte. This observation was unusual and counterintuitive because one would expect a commonly used acetonitrile solvent-based electrolyte, having the highest conductivity of all tested electrolytes, to deliver the best performance.

In situ X-ray diffraction showed expansion and contraction of the MXene interlayer spacing during charging and discharging when acetonitrile was used, but no changes in the interlayer spacing when the propylene carbonate solvent was used. The latter solvent resulted in much higher capacitance. Furthermore, electrodes that don’t expand when ions enter and exit are expected to survive a larger number of charge-discharge cycles.

To probe the dynamics of electrolyte solvent media confined in the MXene layers, the researchers turned to neutron scattering, which is sensitive to hydrogen atoms contained in the solvent molecules. Finally, molecular dynamics simulations done by Vlcek revealed that interactions among the lithium ions, electrolyte solvents and MXene surfaces strongly depend on the size, molecular shape and polarity of the solvent molecules.

In the case of a propylene carbonate-based electrolyte, the lithium ions are not surrounded by solvent and therefore pack tightly between MXene sheets. However, in other electrolytes, lithium ions carry solvent molecules along with them as the lithium ions migrate into the electrode, leading to its expansion upon charging. Modeling may guide the selection of future electrode-electrolyte solvent couples.

“Different solvents created different confined environments that then had profound influence on charge transport and interactions of ions with the MXene electrodes,” Vlcek said. “This variety of structures and behaviors was made possible by the layered structure of MXene electrodes, which can respond to charging by easily expanding and contracting the interlayer space to accommodate a much wider range of solvents than electrodes with more rigid frameworks.” The title of the paper is “Influences from solvents on charge storage in titanium carbide MXenes.”

Source: Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Top image: Drexel University

Recent Posts

Murata Releases Worlds First 10µF/50V Automotive MLCC in 0805 Size

26.6.2025
8

Vishay Expands Automotive High Frequency Thin Film Chip Resistors

26.6.2025
4

Advancements and Applications of Switch Capacitor Power Converters

25.6.2025
11

KYOCERA AVX Releases Robust Vertical-Mating Battery Connectors

25.6.2025
8

Samsung Delivers Silicon Capacitors to Marwell AI Systems

24.6.2025
16

Stackpole Releases Low VCR High Voltage Chip Resistors

23.6.2025
7

Smolteks CNF MIM Capacitor Break 1 µF/mm²

19.6.2025
33

Samsung Electro-Mechanics Releases 0201 X7T 1uF 6.3V MLCC for ADAS Applications

19.6.2025
18

Murata Announces 0402 Automotive Chip Ferrite Beads for V2X

19.6.2025
27

TDK Releases Automotive Power-Over-Coax Inductor for Filters

18.6.2025
20

Upcoming Events

Jul 23
13:00 - 14:00 CEST

PCB design for a Smartwatch

View Calendar

Popular Posts

  • Buck Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boost Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Flyback Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • What is a Dielectric Constant and DF of Plastic Materials?

    4 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 0
  • LLC Resonant Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ripple Current and its Effects on the Performance of Capacitors

    3 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 0
  • How to Design an Inductor

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dual Active Bridge (DAB) Topology Explained

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • SEPIC Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Flying Capacitors Explained

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Newsletter Subscription

 

Passive Components Blog

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • EPCI Membership & Advertisement
  • About

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Premium Suppliers

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version