Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Used-cigarette butts may meet energy storage demands

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Aug, 2014 08:05 AM
    Imagine a world where used-cigarette butts can store energy for your smartphones, tablets and even wind turbines, thus offering a green solution to meet the growing energy storage demands. Not too far.
     
    A group of scientists from South Korea have converted used-cigarette filters into a high-performing material that could be integrated into computers, handheld devices, electrical vehicles and wind turbines to store energy.
     
    “The cellulose acetate fibres that cigarette filters are mostly composed of could be transformed into a carbon-based material using a simple, one-step burning technique called pyrolysis,” explained professor Jongheop Yi from Seoul National University.
     
    As a result of this burning process, the resulting carbon-based material contained a number of tiny pores, increasing its performance as a supercapacitive material.
     
    The material can be used to coat the electrodes of supercapacitors - electrochemical components that can store extremely large amounts of electrical energy.
     
    “A high-performing supercapacitor material should have a large surface area, which can be achieved by incorporating a large number of small pores into the material,” professor Yi noted.
     
    A combination of different pore sizes ensures that the material has high power densities, which is an essential property in a supercapacitor for the fast charging and discharging.
     
    The material stored a higher amount of electrical energy than commercially available carbon.
     
    It also had a higher amount of storage compared to graphene and carbon nanotubes, as reported in previous studies.
     
    It is estimated that as many as 5.6 trillion used-cigarettes are deposited into the environment worldwide every year.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Nanotechnology.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion
    Since public opinion levels off and evolves into an ordered state within a short time, small advantages of one opinion in the early stages can turn into a bigger advantage during the evolution of public opinion

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond
    Do you often play games, check emails or respond to office calls on your cell phone while with family on a dinner? This phone addiction can damage your emotional bonding with kids soon.

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here
    Named Moss FM, the radio is designed by University of Cambridge biochemist Paolo Bombelli and London-based product designer Fabienne Felder.

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!
    Taken by NASA's MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft, it shows fertile areas from South America 

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces
    The app now simulates the spreading and bleeding of the pigment onto the canvas - with dedicated properties for the virtual paper, the pigment, the brushes, the water and so on

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created
    The 3D-printed liver replicas, made of transparent material threaded with coloured arteries and veins, could help surgeons prevent complications while performing liver transplants or removing tumours, a path-breaking research shows.

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created