New electrodes could increase efficiency of electric vehicles and aircraft

Date posted
Funding Agency
(Funded by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research)

One of the most significant challenges standing in the way of widespread adoption of electric vehicles and aircraft has to do with mass, because the most current electric vehicle batteries and supercapacitors are incredibly heavy. A research team from the Texas A&M University College of Engineering has created strong and stiff supercapacitor electrodes based on dopamine-functionalized graphene and Kevlar nanofibers, which might enable energy to be stored within the structural body panels of electric vehicles and aircraft and, as a result, make them lighter.