Title :
Single cell seawater batteries
Author_Institution :
Cape Cod Res. Inc., Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Abstract :
The author explores the feasibility of providing watts of power for years with a single-cell approach built around aluminum anodes and oxygen-consuming or hydrogen-evolving cathodes. Instead of connecting cells together in the usual manner to form a battery, a single cell can power numerous small DC/DC power converters which together provide useful voltage and current from a single low-voltage source. One of the major mechanical design problems is how to achieve deployment of a large surface area cathode and yet store the undeployed battery in a small volume. This has been achieved by designing the single-cell like a wire rope. As a result of advances in DC/DC converter technology, aluminum alloys, and oxygen reduction catalysts, single cell batteries powered by oxygen dissolved in the ocean are capable of yielding in excess of 290 Wh/pound of battery. While hydrogen evolution systems cannot thermodynamically match this level, their projected levels are still high enough to exceed primary lithium systems protected from hydrostatic pressure
Keywords :
aluminium; electrochemical electrodes; power convertors; primary cells; seawater; Al; DC/DC power converters; H2; O2; anodes; cathodes; design; ocean; oxygen reduction catalysts; primary cells; seawater batteries; surface area; Aluminum; Anodes; Batteries; Cathodes; DC-DC power converters; Joining processes; Ocean temperature; Sea surface; Voltage; Wire;
Conference_Titel :
Power Sources Symposium, 1990., Proceedings of the 34th International
Conference_Location :
Cherry Hill, NJ
Print_ISBN :
0-87942-604-7
DOI :
10.1109/IPSS.1990.145804