I had a presentation in a workshop at JETRO last week. The topic is “Food Waste Generation and Urban Ecology in New York City.” This research project is ongoing. Visit https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/nycecology/
I had a presentation in a workshop at JETRO last week. The topic is “Food Waste Generation and Urban Ecology in New York City.” This research project is ongoing. Visit https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/nycecology/
Scalable fabrication of high-power graphene micro-supercapacitors for flexible and on-chip energy storage
Maher F. El-Kady & Richard B. Kaner
Nature Communications 4, Article number: 1475 doi:10.1038/ncomms2446
Received 01 October 2012 Accepted 04 January 2013 Published 12 February 2013
Abstract
Abstract Author information Supplementary information Comments
The rapid development of miniaturized electronic devices has increased the demand for compact on-chip energy storage. Microscale supercapacitors have great potential to complement or replace batteries and electrolytic capacitors in a variety of applications. However, conventional micro-fabrication techniques have proven to be cumbersome in building cost-effective micro-devices, thus limiting their widespread application. Here we demonstrate a scalable fabrication of graphene micro-supercapacitors over large areas by direct laser writing on graphite oxide films using a standard LightScribe DVD burner. More than 100 micro-supercapacitors can be produced on a single disc in 30 min or less. The devices are built on flexible substrates for flexible electronics and on-chip uses that can be integrated with MEMS or CMOS in a single chip. Remarkably, miniaturizing the devices to the microscale results in enhanced charge-storage capacity and rate capability. These micro-supercapacitors demonstrate a power density of ~200 W cm−3, which is among the highest values achieved for any supercapacitor.
UCLA researchers develop new technique to scale up production of graphene micro-supercapacitors
By Davin Malasarn February 19, 2013
Kaner and El-Kady’s micro-supercapacitors
While the demand for ever-smaller electronic devices has spurred the miniaturization of a variety of technologies, one area has lagged behind in this downsizing revolution: energy-storage units, such as batteries and capacitors.
Now, Richard Kaner, a member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA and a professor of chemistry and biochemistry, and Maher El-Kady, a graduate student in Kaner’s laboratory, may have changed the game.
The UCLA researchers have developed a groundbreaking technique that uses a DVD burner to fabricate micro-scale graphene-based supercapacitors — devices that can charge and discharge a hundred to a thousand times faster than standard batteries. These micro-supercapacitors, made from a one-atom–thick layer of graphitic carbon, can be easily manufactured and readily integrated into small devices such as next-generation pacemakers.
Kazi, a student in mechanical dept, and I have started a research project called Sustainable Waste Management. https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/wastemanagement/
Currently I’m also creating a website of my research group: Energy and Environmental Simulation Laboratory. We have a strong connections with other university’s labs.
Energy and Environmental Simulation Lab:
openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/energy/