High voltage supercapacitor is possible?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the potential for high voltage supercapacitors by combining the benefits of supercapacitors and high voltage capacitors, such as ferroelectric materials. Key challenges include dielectric breakdown and leakage due to the proximity of charged plates, which limits the voltage capacity of current supercapacitors like carbon-based models. While carbon supercapacitors can typically charge up to 4 volts, the introduction of materials like barium titanate raises questions about achieving higher voltages without compromising performance. The conversation also highlights the trade-offs between increasing plate spacing for higher voltage and losing capacitance. Overall, the feasibility of high voltage supercapacitors remains uncertain due to these technical limitations.
Stanley514
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Energy density of supercap is equal to square of it`s voltage.
Is it possible to join together advantages of supercaps and high voltage
capacitors such as Ferroelectric caps?
What prevents to use high-k materials in supercaps?
 
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dielectric brakedown. To have large capacitance, you need your plates to be very close to one another (micrometer or nanometer range). Now imagine having opposite charges so close to one another - the forces are enormous and the material will break, or in the best case, leak.
 
What do you think on following project:
http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22297/"
Do you think it is going to fail?
Well,we could charge usual carbon supercap up to 4 volts only,
But carbon is far from best dielectric materials.Do you want to say
that if we will replace carbon with such material as barium titanate
it is not going to be charged even up to 30 volts?
 
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The present state-of-the-art (an example is Maxwell UltraCapacitor) is limited in voltage per cell of 2.8 volts because, as Curl reported, of the thin dielectric. The maximum capacitance however is 3000 farads (not micro, but farads). In order to use in most any application these are put into banks, both series and parallel, until the needed operating voltage (series) and capacitance (parallel). The only fly in this ointment is that the cells require a balancing circuit due to internal variations in leakage. This leakage, if unchecked, will allow some cells to exceed the 2.8 volt limit. Leakage current is microamps so any variation in internal resistance will cause a large voltage variation.
 
Stanley514 said:
What do you think on following project:
http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22297/"
Do you think it is going to fail?
Well,we could charge usual carbon supercap up to 4 volts only,
But carbon is far from best dielectric materials.Do you want to say
that if we will replace carbon with such material as barium titanate
it is not going to be charged even up to 30 volts?

30 volts with nano-scale spacing is a very large field. No matter what material you put in between (or even a vacuum) will allow charge to jump across if the field is strong enough.
Even if this doesn't occur, like I said, it will leak charge and the capacitor will discharge by just sitting there.
 
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Stanley514 said:
Well,we could charge usual carbon supercap up to 4 volts only,
But carbon is far from best dielectric materials.Do you want to say
that if we will replace carbon with such material as barium titanate
it is not going to be charged even up to 30 volts?

Carbon is not a dielectric at all. Supercapacitors don't have a dielectric. They use an electric double layer instead.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_double-layer_capacitor
 
Carbon is not a dielectric at all. Supercapacitors don't have a dielectric. They use an electric double layer instead.
So what we would theoretically to do to increase voltage of supercup?
Find another electrolyte?
 
You increase space between plates... but if you do that, you lose capacitance. Its a trade.
 
How could we calculate theoretical capacitance of supercapacitor (in Farads/g) knowing
its surface area per gram?For example surface are is 2.000 m2/g.What would be capacitance if all this area is ideally utilized?
 
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