- #1
hamiiiii
- 12
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- TL;DR Summary
- New idea for an aluminum air battery
Hey everyone,
I had an idea for making an aluminum air battery that mitigates some of the problems. The draft is quite rough but I just made it now and I can improve it as I go along. So basically the idea is the aluminum will cut up into large grains/pellets in a fuel tank. The pellets will slide via gravity into a cone shaped well (which can be closed using a hatch when battery is not in use) where there sits a wire mesh (which is positively charged via an external power source) to keep them from falling into the electrolyte. Directly inside the electrolyte close to the well is another different mesh which is negatively charged. The idea is the voltage difference, combined with the proximity to the electrolyte, will break the electrons free from the aluminum atoms and cause them to dissolve into the electrolyte with minimal hydrogen evolution. The wire mesh in contact with the aluminum will carry the electrons out to the load into the cathode.
The aluminum ions react with ambient oxygen to form aluminum oxide, which drains from the cathode into a tank. To speed up the reaction and increase power, a compressor would feed air into the cathode where it would maintain pressure.
To avoid the issue of cathode clogging, there is a couple of solutions, one is to move the cathode around to shake loose the deposits (not sure if this idea would work, but putting it out there). Two is to have a separate type of liquid in the cathode, one that can dissolve the alumina deposits and conduct the OH- ions. An ion permeable separator could separate the electrolyte from the liquid to ensure mixing does not occur. Three is to pressurize the electrolyte to increase solubility (again. not sure how well this would work).
This is a rough idea I just thought of now, I'm curious to know what other people think.
I had an idea for making an aluminum air battery that mitigates some of the problems. The draft is quite rough but I just made it now and I can improve it as I go along. So basically the idea is the aluminum will cut up into large grains/pellets in a fuel tank. The pellets will slide via gravity into a cone shaped well (which can be closed using a hatch when battery is not in use) where there sits a wire mesh (which is positively charged via an external power source) to keep them from falling into the electrolyte. Directly inside the electrolyte close to the well is another different mesh which is negatively charged. The idea is the voltage difference, combined with the proximity to the electrolyte, will break the electrons free from the aluminum atoms and cause them to dissolve into the electrolyte with minimal hydrogen evolution. The wire mesh in contact with the aluminum will carry the electrons out to the load into the cathode.
The aluminum ions react with ambient oxygen to form aluminum oxide, which drains from the cathode into a tank. To speed up the reaction and increase power, a compressor would feed air into the cathode where it would maintain pressure.
To avoid the issue of cathode clogging, there is a couple of solutions, one is to move the cathode around to shake loose the deposits (not sure if this idea would work, but putting it out there). Two is to have a separate type of liquid in the cathode, one that can dissolve the alumina deposits and conduct the OH- ions. An ion permeable separator could separate the electrolyte from the liquid to ensure mixing does not occur. Three is to pressurize the electrolyte to increase solubility (again. not sure how well this would work).
This is a rough idea I just thought of now, I'm curious to know what other people think.