That's essentially the finding of a team of Rice University researchers who    have created hybrid carbon nanotube metal oxide arrays as electrode material    that may improve the performance of lithium-ion batteries. With battery technology high on the list of priorities in a world demanding    electric cars and gadgets that last longer between charges, such innovations    are key to the future. Electrochemical capacitors and fuel cells would also    benefit, the researchers said. The team from Pulickel Ajayan's research group published a paper this week    describing the proof-of-concept research in which nanotubes are grown to look    – and act – like the coaxial conducting lines used in cables. The    coax tubes consist of a manganese oxide shell and a highly conductive nanotube    core. "It's a nice bit of nanoscale engineering," said Ajayan, Rice's    Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor in Mechanical Engineering    and Materials Science.  "We've put in two materials – the nanotube, which is highly electrically    conducting and can also absorb lithium, and the manganese oxide, which has very    high capacity but poor electrical conductivity," said Arava Leela Mohana    Reddy, a Rice postdoc researcher. "But when you combine them, you get something    interesting."  That would be the ability to hold a lot of juice and transmit it efficiently.    The researchers expect the number of charge/discharge cycles such batteries    can handle will be greatly enhanced, even with a larger capacity. "Although the combination of these materials has been studied as a composite    electrode by several research groups, it's the coaxial cable design of these    materials that offers improved performance as electrodes for lithium batteries,"    said Ajayan. "At this point, we're trying to engineer and modify the structures to    get the best performance," said Manikoth Shaijumon, also a Rice postdoc.    The microscopic nanotubes, only a few nanometers across, can be bundled into    any number of configurations. Future batteries may be thin and flexible. "And    the whole idea can be transferred to a large scale as well. It is very manufacturable,"    Shaijumon said. The hybrid nanocables grown in a Rice-developed process could also eliminate    the need for binders, materials used in current batteries that hold the elements    together but hinder their conductivity. Posted February 9th, 2009Need to store electricity more efficiently? Put it behind bars. 
 
 
