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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Computational and Experimental Studies on Energy Storage Materials and Electrocatalysts

Moss, Jared B. 01 August 2019 (has links)
With the growing global population comes the ever-increasing consumption of energy in powering cities, electric vehicles, and portable devices such as cell-phones. While the power grid is used to distribute energy to consumers, the energy sources needed to power the grid itself are unsustainable and inefficient. The primary energy sources powering the grid, being fossil fuels, natural gas, and nuclear, are unsustainable as the economically-accessible reserves are continually depleted in exchange for detrimental emissions and air-pollutants. Cleaner, renewable sources, such as solar, wind, and hydroelectric, are intermittent and unreliable during the peak hours of energy usage, that is dawn and dusk. However, during waking hours and nighttime sleeping hours, energy consumption plummets resulting in substantial losses of potential energy as these intermittent energy providers do not have the infrastructure to store unused energy. Therefore, the research and development of efficient energy storage materials and renewable energy sources is critical to meet the needs of society in their fundamental operation while reducing harmful emissions. The research presented in this thesis focuses on selected energy storage materials and electrocatalysts as attractive technology for sustainable and benign renewable energy chemistry. Specifically, (1) theoretical studies on magnesium chloride / aluminum chloride electrolytes provide insight for further development of Mg batteries; (2) theoretical and experimental studies on viologen derivatives for organic redox flow batteries advance the development of these two-electron storage systems; and (3) a new iron(II) polypyridine catalyst that was found to electrochemically reduce CO2 to produce renewable fuels such as carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen (H2), and methane (CH4), as well as promote the photochemical CO2-to-methane conversion with visible light.
2

Room Temperature Molten Liquids Based On Amides : Electrolytes For Rechargeable Batteries, Capacitors And Medium For Nanostructures

Venkata Narayanan, N S 08 1900 (has links)
Room temperature molten liquids are proposed to be good alternates for volatile and harmful organic compounds. They are useful in varied areas of applications ranging from synthesis, catalysis to energy storage molten electrolytes have certain unique characteristics such as low vapour pressure, reasonably high ionic conductivity, high thermal stability and wide electrochemical window. These molten liquids can be classified in to two types depending on the nature of the species present in the liquids. One, those liquids consists only of ions (e.g) conventional imidazolium based ionic liquids and other that consists of ions and solvents (e g) acetamide eutectics. Acetamide and its eutectics from room temperature molten solvents that is unique with interesting physicochemical properties. The solvent properties of molten acetamide are similar to water, with high dielectric consist of 60 at 353 k. its acid – base properties are also similar to water, and it can solublise variety of organic and inorganic compounds as well. in the present studies room temperature molten liquids consisting of acetamide as one of the components have been prepared and used for various applications. Room temperature molten electrolytes consisting of magnesium perchlorate/magnesium triflate as one of the constituents have been used for rechargeable magnesium batteries where as those consisting of zinc perchlorate /zinc triflate have been used for zinc based rechargeable batteries. Full utilization of cathode material (y-mno2) is achieved using amide-based molten liquid as electrolyte in rechargeable zinc based batteries. Ammonium nitrate/ lithium nitrate containing electrolytes have been used for electrochemical super capacitors. They have been used as solvent cum stabilizers for metallic nanochains that can be used as substrate in surface enchanced Raman scattering studies.

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