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Dive into the research topics where Nicklas Blomquist is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicklas Blomquist.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Metal-free supercapacitor with aqueous electrolyte and low-cost carbon materials

Nicklas Blomquist; Thomas Wells; Britta Andres; Joakim Bäckström; Sven Forsberg; Håkan Olin

Electric double-layer capacitors (EDLCs) or supercapacitors (SCs) are fast energy storage devices with high pulse efficiency and superior cyclability, which makes them useful in various applications including electronics, vehicles and grids. Aqueous SCs are considered to be more environmentally friendly than those based on organic electrolytes. Because of the corrosive nature of the aqueous environment, however, expensive electrochemically stable materials are needed for the current collectors and electrodes in aqueous SCs. This results in high costs for a given energy-storage capacity. To address this, we developed a novel low-cost aqueous SC using graphite foil as the current collector and a mix of graphene, nanographite, simple water-purification carbons and nanocellulose as electrodes. The electrodes were coated directly onto the graphite foil by using casting frames and the SCs were assembled in a pouch cell design. With this approach, we achieved a material cost reduction of greater than 90% while maintaining approximately one-half of the specific capacitance of a commercial unit, thus demonstrating that the proposed SC can be an environmentally friendly, low-cost alternative to conventional SCs.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Large-Scale Production of Nanographite by Tube-Shear Exfoliation in Water

Nicklas Blomquist; Ann-Christine Engström; Magnus Hummelgård; Britta Andres; Sven Forsberg; Håkan Olin

The number of applications based on graphene, few-layer graphene, and nanographite is rapidly increasing. A large-scale process for production of these materials is critically needed to achieve cost-effective commercial products. Here, we present a novel process to mechanically exfoliate industrial quantities of nanographite from graphite in an aqueous environment with low energy consumption and at controlled shear conditions. This process, based on hydrodynamic tube shearing, produced nanometer-thick and micrometer-wide flakes of nanographite with a production rate exceeding 500 gh-1 with an energy consumption about 10 Whg-1. In addition, to facilitate large-area coating, we show that the nanographite can be mixed with nanofibrillated cellulose in the process to form highly conductive, robust and environmentally friendly composites. This composite has a sheet resistance below 1.75 Ω/sq and an electrical resistivity of 1.39×10-4 Ωm and may find use in several applications, from supercapacitors and batteries to printed electronics and solar cells. A batch of 100 liter was processed in less than 4 hours. The design of the process allow scaling to even larger volumes and the low energy consumption indicates a low-cost process.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Electrode Mass Balancing as an Inexpensive and Simple Method to Increase the Capacitance of Electric Double-Layer Capacitors.

Britta Andres; Ann-Christine Engström; Nicklas Blomquist; Sven Forsberg; Christina Dahlström; Håkan Olin

Symmetric electric double-layer capacitors (EDLCs) have equal masses of the same active material in both electrodes. However, having equal electrode masses may prevent the EDLC to have the largest possible specific capacitance if the sizes of the hydrated anions and cations in the electrolyte differ because the electrodes and the electrolyte may not be completely utilized. Here we demonstrate how this issue can be resolved by mass balancing. If the electrode masses are adjusted according to the size of the ions, one can easily increase an EDLC’s specific capacitance. To that end, we performed galvanostatic cycling to measure the capacitances of symmetric EDLCs with different electrode mass ratios using four aqueous electrolytes— Na2SO4, H2SO4, NaOH, and KOH (all with a concentration of 1 M)—and compared these to the theoretical optimal electrode mass ratio that we calculated using the sizes of the hydrated ions. Both the theoretical and experimental values revealed lower-than-1 optimal electrode ratios for all electrolytes except KOH. The largest increase in capacitance was obtained for EDLCs with NaOH as electrolyte. Specifically, we demonstrate an increase of the specific capacitance by 8.6% by adjusting the electrode mass ratio from 1 to 0.86. Our findings demonstrate that electrode mass balancing is a simple and inexpensive method to increase the capacitance of EDLCs. Furthermore, our results imply that one can reduce the amount of unused material in EDLCs and thus decrease their weight, volume and cost.


Materials & Design | 2018

Cellulose binders for electric double-layer capacitor electrodes: The influence of cellulose quality on electrical properties

Britta Andres; Christina Dahlström; Nicklas Blomquist; Magnus Norgren; Håkan Olin


Archive | 2016

Large-Scale Nanographite Exfoliation for Low-Cost Metal-Free Supercapacitors

Nicklas Blomquist


2015 E-MRS Spring Meeting, May 11-15, 2015, Lille, France | 2015

Paper-based supercapacitors

Sven Forsberg; Britta Andres; Nicklas Blomquist; Christina Dahlström; Ann-Christine Engström; Håkan Olin


2015 E-MRS Spring Meeting | 2015

Cellulose-based binder systems for electrochemical electrodes

Britta Andres; Christina Dahlström; Ann-Christine Engström; Sven Forsberg; Nicklas Blomquist; Håkan Olin


MWP, Innovative paper-based products symposium, 2014 | 2014

Exfoliation of MoS2 for paper based applications

Viviane Alecrim; Britta Andres; Renyun Zhang; Magnus Hummelgård; Nicklas Blomquist; Sven Forsberg; Ann-Christine Engström; Kenichi Shimizu; Mattias Andersson; Håkan Olin


Graphene Week 2014, 23 – 27 June 2014, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden | 2014

Characterization of nanographite and graphene produced in a high-pressure homogenizer

Britta Andres; Nicklas Blomquist; Sven Forsberg; Håkan Olin


Graphene Study 2014, Obergurgl, Austria | 2014

Inexpensive production of graphene by mechanical treatment of graphite

Britta Andres; Nicklas Blomquist; Sven Forsberg; Håkan Olin

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