D. Weingarth
Leibniz Association
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by D. Weingarth.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2015
C. Prehal; D. Weingarth; E. Perre; R. T. Lechner; Heinz Amenitsch; Oskar Paris; Volker Presser
The charge storage mechanism and ion arrangement inside electrically charged carbon nanopores is a very active research field with tremendous importance for advanced electrochemical technologies, such as supercapacitors or capacitive deionization. Going far beyond the state of art, we present for the first time a comprehensive study of tracking ion electrosorption in aqueous electrolytes during charging and discharging of porous carbon electrodes using in situ X-ray scattering. We provide novel and quantitative insights into the local concentration of anions and cations and demonstrate that the global number of ions within the pores does not vary during charging and discharging. In addition, we have unique access to the spatial arrangement of ions inside carbon nanopores by using a simple, yet powerful two-phase model. Applying this model to our data, we show that double-layer formation is accomplished by a unique combination of preferred counter-ion adsorption directly at the pore wall which drains ions from their local surrounding inside carbon nanopores. Effectively, this leads to a situation which globally appears as ion swapping. Broader context The demand for green energy technologies has increased tremendously over the past few years. A serious bottleneck for sustainable energy management on large- and small-scales (from renewable energy sources to e-mobility or microelectronics) is efficient energy storage. Among such systems, supercapacitors have emerged as an advanced technology for rapid energy storage and recovery at high efficiency and long life expectancy. Yet, further advancement of supercapacitor technology requires a better understanding of the fundamental charge storage mechanisms via ion electrosorption in nanoporous carbon materials. This is also the basis to capitalize advanced modelling for an improved design of electrode materials and structures. Yet, even the most advanced experimental in situ methods fall short in combining global information on charge and ion concentration with the local arrangement of ions inside carbon nanopores. The present work illustrates the potential of in situ small-angle X-ray scattering as a complementary experimental approach providing novel insights into ion transport and charge storage within carbon nanopores.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2015
Julia-Katharina Ewert; D. Weingarth; Christine E. Denner; Martin Friedrich; Marco Zeiger; Anna Schreiber; Nicolas Jäckel; Volker Presser; Rhett Kempe
Supercapacitors combine efficient electrical energy storage and performance stability based on fast electrosorption of electrolyte ions at charged interfaces. They are a central element of existing and emerging energy concepts. A better understanding of capacitance enhancement options is essential to exploit the full potential of supercapacitors. Here, we report a novel hierarchically structured N-doped carbon material and a significant capacitance enhancement for a specific ionic liquid. Our studies indicate that matching of the electrode material and the ionic liquid specifically leads to a constant normalized resistance of the electrode material (voltage window up to ±1 V vs. carbon) and a significant enhancement of the specific capacitance. Such effects are not seen for standard organic electrolytes, non-matched ionic liquids, or non-N-doped carbons. A higher N-doping of the electrode material improves the symmetric full cell capacitance of the match and considerably increases its long-term stability at +3 V cell voltage. This novel observance of enhanced specific capacitance for N-doped carbons with matched ionic liquid may enable a new platform for developing supercapacitors with enhanced energy storage capacity.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2016
Mesut Aslan; Marco Zeiger; Nicolas Jäckel; Ingrid Grobelsek; D. Weingarth; Volker Presser
Capacitive deionization (CDI) is a promising salt removal technology with high energy efficiency when applied to low molar concentration aqueous electrolytes. As an interfacial process, ion electrosorption during CDI operation is sensitive to the pore structure and the total pore volume of carbon electrodes limits the maximum salt adsorption capacity (SAC). Thus, activation of carbons as a widely used method to enhance the porosity of a material should also be highly attractive for improving SAC values. In our study, we use easy-to-scale and facile-to-apply CO2-activation at temperatures between 950 °C and 1020 °C to increase the porosity of commercially available activated carbon. While the pore volume and surface area can be significantly increased up to 1.51 cm(3) g(-1) and 2113 m(2) g(-1), this comes at the expense of making the carbon more hydrophobic. We present a novel strategy to capitalize on the improved pore structure by admixing as received (more hydrophilic) carbon with CO2-treated (more hydrophobic) carbon for CDI electrodes without using membranes. This translates into an enhanced charge storage ability in high and low molar concentrations (1 M and 5 mM NaCl) and significantly improved CDI performance (at 5 mM NaCl). In particular, we obtain stable CDI performance at 0.86 charge efficiency with 13.1 mg g(-1) SAC for an optimized 2:1 mixture (by mass).
Energy and Environmental Science | 2015
Andreas Härtel; Mathijs Janssen; D. Weingarth; Volker Presser; René van Roij
Thermal energy is abundantly available, and especially low-grade heat is often wasted in industrial processes as a by-product. Tapping into this vast energy reservoir with cost-attractive technologies may become a key element for the transition to an energy-sustainable economy and society. We propose a novel heat-to-current converter which is based on the temperature dependence of the cell voltage of charged supercapacitors. Using a commercially available supercapacitor, we observed a thermal cell-voltage rise of around 0.6 mV K−1 over a temperature window of 0 °C to 65 °C. Within our theoretical model, this can be used to operate a Stirling-like charge–voltage cycle whose efficiency is competitive to the most-efficient thermoelectric (Seebeck) engines. Our proposed heat-to-current converter is built from cheap materials, contains no moving parts, and could operate with a plethora of electrolytes which can be chosen for optimal performance at specific working temperatures. Therefore, this heat-to-current converter is interesting for small-scale, domestic, and industrial applications.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Juhan Lee; Soumyadip Choudhury; D. Weingarth; Daekyu Kim; Volker Presser
We demonstrate stable hybrid electrochemical energy storage performance of a redox-active electrolyte, namely potassium ferricyanide in aqueous media in a supercapacitor-like setup. Challenging issues associated with such a system are a large leakage current and high self-discharge, both stemming from ion redox shuttling through the separator. The latter is effectively eliminated when using an ion exchange membrane instead of a porous separator. Other critical factors toward the optimization of a redox-active electrolyte system, especially electrolyte concentration and volume of electrolyte, have been studied by electrochemical methods. Finally, excellent long-term stability is demonstrated up to 10 000 charge/discharge cycles at 1.2 and 1.8 V, with a broad maximum stability window of up to 1.8 V cell voltage as determined via cyclic voltammetry. An energy capacity of 28.3 Wh/kg or 11.4 Wh/L has been obtained from such cells, taking the nonlinearity of the charge-discharge profile into account. The power performance of our cell has been determined to be 7.1 kW/kg (ca. 2.9 kW/L or 1.2 kW/m(2)). These ratings are higher compared to the same cell operated in aqueous sodium sulfate. This hybrid electrochemical energy storage system is believed to find a strong foothold in future advanced energy storage applications.
Journal of Power Sources | 2013
D. Weingarth; A. Foelske-Schmitz; R. Kötz
Advanced Energy Materials | 2014
D. Weingarth; Marco Zeiger; Nicolas Jäckel; Mesut Aslan; Guang Feng; Volker Presser
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014
S. Porada; D. Weingarth; H. V. M. Hamelers; M. Bryjak; Volker Presser; P.M. Biesheuvel
Journal of Power Sources | 2016
Nicolas Jäckel; M. Rodner; Anna Schreiber; J. Jeongwook; Marco Zeiger; Mesut Aslan; D. Weingarth; Volker Presser
Carbon | 2015
Marco Zeiger; Nicolas Jäckel; Mesut Aslan; D. Weingarth; Volker Presser