화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Applied Electrochemistry, Vol.48, No.3, 243-250, 2018
An aluminium battery operating with an aqueous electrolyte
Aluminium is an attractive active material for battery systems due to its abundance, low cost, a gravimetric energy density of 2.98 Ah g(-1) (c.f. lithium 3.86 Ah g(-1)) and a volumetric energy density of 8.04 Ah cm(-3) (c.f. lithium 2.06 Ah cm(-3)). An aqueous electrolyte-based aluminium-ion cell is described using TiO2 nanopowder as the negative electrode, CuHCF (copper-hexacyanoferrate) as the positive electrode and an electrolyte consisting of 1 mol dm(-3) AlCl3 and 1 mol dm(-3) KCl. Voltammetric and galvanostatic analyses have shown that the discharge voltage is circa 1.5 V. Both a single-cell and 2-cell battery are demonstrated using 10 cm(2) electrodes and 126 and 256 mg total active material for the 1-cell and 2-cell batteries, respectively. The single cell exhibits an energy density of circa 15 mW h g(-1) (combined positive and negative electrode masses) at a power density of 300 mW g(-1) with energy efficiency remaining above 70% for over 1750 cycles. Initial characterisation shows that charge storage is due to the presence of Al3+. Cell capacity is circa 10 mA h g(-1) and operates with a discharge voltage of circa 1.5 V (efficiency > 80% at 20C charge/discharge rate). [GRAPHICS] .