Carbon fibre based electrodes for structural batteries
Review article, 2024

Carbon fibre based electrodes offer the potential to significantly improve the combined electrochemical and mechanical performance of structural batteries in future electrified transport. This review compares carbon fibre based electrodes to existing structural battery electrodes and identifies how both the electrochemical and mechanical performance can be improved. In terms of electrochemical performance achieved to date, carbon fibre based anodes outperform structural anode materials, whilst carbon fibre based cathodes offer similar performance to structural cathode materials. In addition, while the application of coating materials to carbon fibre based electrodes can lead to improved tensile strength compared to that of uncoated carbon fibres, the available mechanical property data are limited; a key future research avenue is to understand the influence of interfaces in carbon fibre based
electrodes, which are critical to overall mechanical integrity. This review of carbon fibre based electrode materials, and their assembly strategies, highlights that research should focus on sustainable electrode materials and scalable assembly strategies.

Author

Robert Gray

University of Bath

Thomas Barthelay

University of Bath

University of Oxford

Chris R. Bowen

University of Bath

Frank Marken

University of Bath

Alexander Lunt

University of Bath

Leif Asp

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Dan Zenkert

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Paloma Rodriguez

University of Bath

Johanna Xu

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Karl Bouton

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Andrew T. Rhead

University of Bath

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

20507488 (ISSN) 20507496 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 38 25580-25599

2D material-based technology for industrial applications (2D-TECH)

VINNOVA (2019-00068), 2020-05-01 -- 2024-12-31.

GKN Aerospace Sweden (2D-tech), 2021-01-01 -- 2024-12-31.

Multifunctional carbon fibres for battery electrodes

Office of Naval Research (N62909-22-1-2037), 2022-06-01 -- 2025-05-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Composite Science and Engineering

DOI

10.1039/d4ta01008f

More information

Latest update

10/28/2024