SuperCapacitors Explained
SuperCapacitors Explained
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SuperCapacitors Explained
by Girish Radhakrishnan
Last Updated on June 20, 2018 by Swag 2 Comments
In this post we are going to understand what a supercapacitor is, how closely similar or
different to an ordinary capacitor, where it is used and we will be doing apples to apples
comparison between batteries and supercapacitors to find out which one of them is superior.
Let’s understand the basics of an ordinary capacitor.
The stack of aluminium and tissue is rolled into cylinder form and housed into aluminium
chassis. The diameter of the roll, height and thickness of the tissue determines the various
parameters of the capacitor.
The electrolytic capacitors are polarized, which means it has anode and cathode terminal and
we should not be interchanged the input supply polarity to the capacitor as we do on other type
of capacitors.
Construction of Supercapacitor:
The construction of supercapacitors are fundamentally same as ordinary capacitor only the
difference is the type of material used and some method is utilized to increase the energy
storing capacity.
Supercapacitors have conductive plates on either side of the separator soaked in electrolyte and
the separator is a very thin dielectric materiel made from plastic or carbon or paper.
The separator is made very thin compare to ordinary capacitor to increase efficiency of ion
transfer between plates.
The supercapacitors are sometimes referred as double-layer; this is because when the plates on
either sides charge up it produces charge on either side of the separator as shown in figure.
By now you would have an idea about supercapacitor and its fundamental functioning.
Battery vs Supercapacitor:
Let’s compare energy density and weight in batteries and supercaps.
Lithium-ion and lithium-polymer has the highest energy density compare to any other battery
technology available commercially. This is the reason why our smartphones and other portable
electronics are built with li-ion/polymer.
The energy density of supercaps is pretty low compare to lithium batteries thus making it ideal
only for non-portable devices.
Supercaps are very good at rapid charging and discharging. This cannot be achieved with
battery due to higher internal resistance in all kinds of batteries.
If we try to discharge the battery beyond its safer current limit, we might damage the battery.
This is because the batteries possesses internal resistance and generate heat. The generated
thermal energy is enough to create irreversible damage to battery capacity.
In supercaps, internal resistance is very small, even smaller than internal resistance in some
automobile batteries which is designed to provide high current. The chance of supercapacitor
getting damaged due to thermal is pretty low.
The batteries can hold the charge for very long period of time, but for supercaps self-discharge
is a problem and not suitable for storing energy for long period of time.
Now its conclusion time,
So which one of them is superior? Probably none of them are superior to each other. Batteries
have great portability but, supercaps have very high charging and discharging rate. At end of
the day it depends on the application what we use and this decides which one of them is most
suitable.
Let us know in the comment section, do you think one day supercapacitors will replace batteries
due to rapid development in technology.
Comments
1. 9707a392-a733-11e5-ac1d-d7e256602c6e says
February 19, 2017 at 1:26 pm
Thankyou very much for your nice information as usual.How can we use supercap.for
emergency light?and how to build a charger for it?
Reply
o Swagatam says
February 20, 2017 at 4:17 am
you will require many capacitors in parallel for making a an emergency light from
it, and select an LED whose consumption allows the backup to last for the
required amount of time.
charger controller is not required, but make sure that the supply input voltage to
the super capacitors is not higher than its breakdown voltage limit.
Reply