METHOD OF PRODUCING A GRAPHENE FILM
20230160087 ยท 2023-05-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
C25D13/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01M4/1393
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/0471
ELECTRICITY
International classification
C25D13/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A graphene composite film is produced for application to the anode of a battery. A graphene dispersion is peeled off of a graphite solvent mixture ultrasonically. The graphene material is then mixed with organic amine salt to be charged. Electrophoretic deposition is used to turn the graphene into a film. The film is then passed through a heat treatment to remove the organic amine salt. The resulting film is a highly conductive graphene film with a two-dimensional structure.
Claims
1. A method of producing and depositing a graphene film on an anode, comprising the steps of: a. creating a graphite dispersion; b. electrostatically charging said graphene dispersion by addition of an organic amine salt; c. applying a conductive graphene film to said anode by electrophoretic deposition; and d. removing said organic amine salt from said deposited graphene film by application of heat.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of creating a graphene dispersion comprises the steps of: a. adding graphite to an organic solvent to create a graphite and organic solvent mixture; b. applying first acoustic power at 210 Watts to said graphite and organic solvent mixture to create a graphite dispersion; c. heating said graphite dispersion in a vacuum furnace and then passively cooling said graphite dispersion to obtain solvent-intercalated expanded graphite; d. adding said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite to additional said organic solvent; e. applying second ultrasonic power to said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite and said organic solvent mixture at 210 Watts; f. centrifuging said solvent intercalated expanded graphite in said organic solvent at 4000 revolutions per minute to obtain graphene solid content in said graphene dispersion that comprises at least 0.01 grams of graphene per liter of said organic solvent.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein said graphite and organic solvent mixture comprises a ratio of one gram of said graphite per ten milliliters of said organic solvent.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein said first and second acoustic powers comprise 210 Watts for 30 minutes to 120 minutes, and one hour to ten hours, respectively.
5. The method of claim 2, wherein said vacuum furnace is heated at a rate of ten degrees Celsius per minute, under protection of a reducing gas, to obtain a temperature in the range of 400 to 800 degrees Celsius for a period of one hour to four hours.
6. The method of claim 2, wherein said graphene solid content in said graphene dispersion is not more than 0.1 grams of graphene solid content per liter.
7. The method of claim 2, wherein said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite added to said organic solvent creates a solid content of one gram of said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite per one liter of said organic solvent.
8. The method of claim 2, wherein the step of electrostatically charging said graphene dispersion by addition of said organic amine salt comprises the steps of: a. dissolving said organic amine salt into said organic solvent; b. adding said organic amine salt dissolved into said organic solvent into said graphene dispersion; c. applying ultrasonic power at 210 Watts to said mixture of organic amine salt, said organic solvent, and said graphene dispersion to create a positively charged graphene dispersion.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein said ultrasonic power is applied for a period of between 10 minutes and 30 minutes, inclusive.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the step of applying a conductive graphene film to said anode by electrophoretic deposition comprises the steps of: a. using said charged graphene dispersion as the electrophoresis of the electrophoretic liquid; b. placing at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate in said electrophoretic liquid, parallel and spaced apart in the range of one millimeter to fifty millimeters; c. applying current across said at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate; and d. maintaining the temperature of the electrophoretic liquid at approximately sixty degrees Celsius for five minutes to deposit said graphene film on said at least one anode plate.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein said spaced-apart distance comprises fifteen millimeters.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the step of removing said organic amine salt from said deposited graphene film by application of heat comprises the steps of: a. heating said graphene-film-deposited at least one anode plate in the presence of a reducing gas to a temperature in the range between two hundred degrees Celsius and eight hundred degrees Celsius at a rate of ten degrees Celsius per minute; b. maintaining said heating temperature in the range of four hundred degrees Celsius and six hundred degrees Celsius for approximately four hours; and c. passively cooling the resulting said graphene-film-deposited at least one anode plate to room temperature.
13. A method producing and depositing a graphene film on an anode comprising the steps of: a. adding graphite to an organic solvent in the ratio of graphite to organic solvent of 1 gram per 10 milliliters; b. applying ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts to said graphite and organic solvent mixture for a period between thirty minutes to one-hundred-twenty minutes to create a graphite dispersion; c. heating said first graphite dispersion in a vacuum furnace, heated at a rate of ten degrees Celsius per minute under the protection of nitrogen and maintain heat in a range between four hundred degrees Celsius to eight hundred degrees Celsius for a period between one and four hours, to obtain solvent-intercalated expanded graphite; d. adding said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite to said organic solvent again to prepare a mixture having a solid content of one gram of solvent-intercalated expanded graphite per liter of said organic solvent; e. apply ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts for a period in the range of one hour to ten hour to said mixture having a solid content of one gram per liter gram of solvent-intercalated expanded graphite per liter of said organic solvent; f. centrifuging said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite in said organic solvent at four thousand revolutions per minute for a period between thirty and 120 minutes to obtain graphene solid content in the graphene dispersion that is 0.01 to 0.1 grams of said graphene per liter of said organic solvent.
14. The method of claim 13, comprising the steps of: a. dissolving said organic amine salt into said organic solvent to achieve a ratio of one gram of organic amine salt per liter of said organic solvent; b. adding said organic amine salt dissolved into said organic solvent into said graphene dispersion; c. applying ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts to said organic amine salt in said organic solvent and graphene dispersion mixture for a period between ten minutes and thirty minutes to create a positively charged graphene dispersion.
15. The method of claim 14, comprising the steps of: a. using said positively charged graphene dispersion as the electrophoresis of an electrophoretic liquid; b. placing at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate in said electrophoretic liquid, parallel and spaced apart by fifteen millimeters; c. applying current across said at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate; and d. maintaining the temperature of the electrophoretic liquid at approximately sixty degrees Celsius for five minutes to deposit said graphene film on said anode.
16. The method of claim 15, comprising the steps of: a. heating said graphene-film-deposited anode in the presence of one of nitrogen and other reducing gas to a range between two hundred degrees Celsius and eight hundred degrees Celsius at a rate often degrees Celsius per minute; b. maintaining a temperature in the range of four hundred degrees Celsius and six hundred degrees Celsius for approximately four hours; and c. passively cooling said graphene-film-deposited anode to room temperature.
17. A method producing and depositing a graphene film on an anode comprising the steps of: a. adding graphite to an organic solvent in the ratio of graphite to organic solvent of 1 gram of graphite per 10 milliliters of organic solvent, wherein said organic solvent is one of: i. NMP(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidone); ii. acetone; iii. methanol; and iv. ethanol; b. applying ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts to said graphite and organic solvent mixture for a period between thirty minutes to one-hundred-twenty minutes to create a graphite dispersion; c. heating said first graphite dispersion in a vacuum furnace, heated at a rate of ten degrees Celsius per minute under the protection of nitrogen and maintain heat in a range between four hundred degrees Celsius to eight hundred degrees Celsius for a period between one and four hours, to obtain solvent-intercalated expanded graphite; d. adding said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite to said organic solvent again to prepare a mixture having a solid content of one gram of said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite per liter of said organic solvent; e. applying ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts for a period in the range of one hour to ten hours to said mixture having a solid content of one gram of said solvent-intercalated expanded graphite per liter of said organic solvent; f. centrifuging said mixture of solvent-intercalated expanded graphite in said organic solvent at four thousand revolutions per minute for a period between thirty minutes and 120 minutes to obtain graphene solid content in said graphene dispersion that is 0.01 to 0.1 grams of said graphene per liter of said organic solvent.
18. The method of claim 13, comprising the steps of: a. dissolving an organic amine salt into said organic solvent to achieve a ratio of one gram of organic amine salt per liter of said organic solvent, wherein said organic amine salt comprises one of: i. aniline hydrochloride; and ii. benzidine dihydrochloride; b. adding said organic amine salt dissolved into said organic solvent into said graphene dispersion; c. applying ultrasonic energy at 210 Watts for a period between ten minutes and thirty minutes to said organic amine salt in said organic solvent and graphene dispersion mixture to create a positively charged graphene dispersion.
19. The method of claim 14, comprising the steps of: a. using said positively charged graphene dispersion as the electrophoresis of an electrophoretic liquid; b. placing at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate in said electrophoretic liquid, parallel and spaced apart in by fifteen millimeters; c. applying current across said at least one anode plate and at least one cathode plate; and d. maintaining the temperature of the electrophoretic liquid at approximately sixty degrees Celsius for five minutes to deposit said graphene film on said at least one anode plate.
20. The method of claim 15, comprising the steps of: a. heating said graphene-film-deposited anode plate in the presence of one of nitrogen and other reducing gas to a range between two hundred degrees Celsius and eight hundred degrees Celsius at a rate often degrees Celsius per minute; b. maintaining said at least one graphene-film-deposited anode plate at a temperature in the range of four hundred degrees Celsius and six hundred degrees Celsius for approximately four hours; and c. passively cooling said at least one graphene-film-deposited anode plate to room temperature.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] The present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the following drawing figures, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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[0017] The result of process 100 is a conductive graphene composite film that can be used in a variety of battery applications such as lithium polymer pouch to lithium ion cylindrical battery cells.
[0018] The process 100 may be used to apply graphene composite conductive film to an anode of a lithium polymer battery to increase power density and life cycles A single sheet, or several sheets, may be applied depending on application. When a battery charges, the battery may swell and then compress as it cools. This is a physically taxing, but increased conductivity reduces resistance and therefor heat and the attendant swelling of the battery.
[0019] Graphene resolves three key deficiencies in batteries: conductivity (heat generation), power density, and life cycles.
[0020] The following claims include some functional claiming and do not include any statements of intended purpose.