Home About Us Feedback Download
     Advanced Search  
March 14, 2010
 India
National
Politics
Business
Sports
Sci-Tech
Entertainment
Travel
Health
Religion
Art - Culture
Diaspora
Education
 International
Pakistan
Rest of South Asia
Asia
Americas
Europe
Australasia
Gulf-Middle East
Africa
World
 Business:
 ASIA | US | EUROPE
 updated 1330 IST
 NIKKEI -2 11488 
 HANG SENG +51 13846 
 NEC -9 4164 
  Home » Sci-Tech   E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Defects in carbon nanotubes could lead to improved charging for cell phones
11/20/2009 2:05:00 PM

Washington, November 20 (ANI): Scientists have discovered that defects in carbon nanotubes could lead to supercapacitors that could possibly be used for improving charge and energy storage systems in portable electronic devices such as cell phones.

Mark Hoefer, a University of California San Diego (UCSD) materials science grad student, and mechanical engineering professor Prabhakar Bandaru, made the discovery.

Bandaru, along with graduate student Mark Hoefer, have found that artificially introduced defects in nanotubes can aid the development of supercapacitors.

While batteries have large storage capacity, they take a long time to charge; while electrostatic capacitors can charge quickly but typically have limited capacity. However, supercapacitors/electrochemical capacitors incorporate the advantages of both, Bandaru said.

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been generally hailed as one of the wonder materials of the 21st century and have been widely recognized as ushering in the nanotechnology revolution.

However, defects are inevitable in such a practical structure, an aspect that was first investigated by UCSD engineering graduate student Jeff Nichols and then substantially extended by Hoefer in Bandaru's lab.

We first realized that defective CNTs could be used for energy storage when we were investigating their use as electrodes for chemical sensors, Hoefer said.

During our initial tests, we noticed that we were able to create charged defects that could be used to increase CNT charge storage capabilities, he added.

Specifically, defects on nanotubes create additional charge sites enhancing the stored charge.

The researchers have also discovered methods which could increase or decrease the charge associated with the defects by bombarding the CNTs with argon or hydrogen.

Carbon nanotubes could serve as supercapacitor electrodes with enhanced charge and energy storage capacity.

At the very outset, it is interesting that CNTs, which are nominally considered perfect, could be useful with so many incorporated defects, said Bandaru.

According to the researchers, the energy density and power density obtained through their work could be practically higher than existing capacitor configurations which suffer from problems associated with poor reliability, cost, and poor electrical characteristics.

Bandaru and Hoefer hope that their research could have major implications in the area of energy storage, a pertinent topic of today.

We hope that our research will spark future interest in utilizing CNTs as electrodes in charge storage devices with greater energy and power densities, Hoefer said. (ANI)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
Top News
  Dibakar Banerjee goes bold with ' ...
  I'm single and still complete: Vi ...
  IPL Scoreboard: Deccan Chargers v ...
  Lucknow turns blue on eve of Maya ...
  Government confident of women's b ...
  West Bengal home secretary visits ...
  Two killed as a train rams into t ...
  India mends Uganda kids' hearts, ...
  Amandeep, Jai Bhagwan march to se ...
  Clark will play the first Test ag ...
 
World News
  Cartoonist lampoons niqab, angers ...
  'Alice in Wonderland' dominates b ...
  Two Al Qaeda men killed in Yemen ...
  South African President condoles ...
  33 killed in Kazakhstan flood
  Synagogue opens in German town af ...
  16 Taliban militants killed in Pa ...
  Iraqi parliamentary race remains ...
  Arabs, Europeans criticise Israel ...
  David Schwimmer finally to marry? ...
 
Advertisement 


South Asian Videos
Bollywood On Demand
India On Demand
Tollywood On Demand
Kollywood On Demand
Hollywood Videos
India User Videos
Realtors India
Indian Friends
Indian Short Films
Post Classifieds
Bollywood Pictures
Hindi Lyrics
Hindi Songs
Bollywood Photos
Indian Videos
India Greetings
Play Games Online
Indian Recipes
National|Politics|Business|Sports|Sci-Tech|Entertainment|Travel|Health|Religion|Art - Culture|Diaspora|Education|
Pakistan|Rest of South Asia|Asia|Americas|Europe|Australasia|Gulf-Middle East|Africa|World|
Help | Site Map | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Publishers

©2009 southasianews.com, All Rights Reserved