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New Shape-Morphing Battery Materials
Researchers at MIT have discovered a promising
approach that takes advantage of the mechanism
that will eventually cause your laptop battery
to fail: the expansion and contraction of electrode
materials in the battery.
This is a classical case of taking lemons
and making lemonade, says Yet-Ming Chiang,
a materials science and engineering professor
at MIT whos working on the project. Articles
describing the work were to appear in upcoming
issues of Advanced Functional Materials and
Electrochemical and Solid State Letters.
For years, researchers in the related field of
batteries have faced the problem that as ions
move from one electrode to another, as the battery
charges, they cause the electrode material to
expand, then contract again as the battery discharges.
This characteristic can cause the internal structure
of the battery to break apart over time. Researchers
have been searching for materials that dont
suffer from the effect. But when Chiang calculated
how much mechanical energy this expansion could
involve, he had a moment of euphoria. And later
experiments showed that batteries have the mechanical
energy needed to move a load ten times as far
as they can be moved with piezoelectric movers.
The batterys performance does come with
a tradeoff, though: speed. Piezoelectrics can
easily operate at several thousand cycles per
second, says Chiang. But the expansion of the
battery is limited by how long it takes to charge
it. Depending on how much movement is required,
this could take from just over a minute to a
sizable fraction of an hour, according to
Steven Hall, an aeronautics and astronautics professor
at MIT involved in the project. The researchers
hope to improve this by decreasing the time it
takes to charge a battery.
Chiang is also working to design physically stronger
batteries that can take better advantage of the
electrodes mechanical energy.
Existing commercially available batteries are
good enough to build a demonstration model, which
the researchers hope to have ready early next
year. Eventually, a series of batteries will be
set into the rotor blade and used to selectively
morph it.
Such shape-shifting will allow engineers to avoid
a compromise that has been at the heart of helicopter
design. Helicopters are built to do two very different
things hover and cruise. As a result, they
do neither particularly well. Being able to change
the rotor shape in flight could optimize them
for these two functions. Chiang and Hall calculate
that a helicopter could then operate with about
1% less fuel, a savings that could add up considerably
over time. Alternatively, military helicopters
could carry two additional troops or work better
in high-altitude operations in the mountains.
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