Remember wood paneled station wagons? Well, wood is back, but this time it's not for aesthetics—it's for reducing vehicle weight with renewable materials. Swedish researchers have produced the world's first model car with a roof and battery made from wood-based carbon fiber.
Although it's built on the scale of a toy, the prototype vehicle represents a giant step towards realizing a vision of new lightweight materials from the forest, one of the benefits of a so-called bioeconomy.
The demo is a joint project of KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, the Swedish research institute Innventia and Swerea, a research group for industrial renewal and sustainable development.
The key ingredient in the carbon fiber composite is lignin, a constituent of the cell walls of nearly all plants that grow on dry land. Lignin is the second most abundant natural polymer in the world, surpassed only by cellulose.
Göran Lindbergh, Professor of Chemical Engineering at KTH, says that the use of wood lignin as an electrode material came from previous research he did with Innventia. Lignin batteries can be produced from renewable raw materials, in this case the byproduct from paper pulp production.
"The lightness of the material is especially important for electric cars because then batteries last longer," Lindbergh says. "Lignin-based carbon fiber is cheaper than ordinary carbon fiber. Otherwise batteries made with lignin are indistinguishable from ordinary batteries."
Research along similar lines is being done a Oak Ridge National Laboratories And North Carolina State University
(Score: 3, Informative) by frojack on Thursday February 11 2016, @10:01PM
As a Summer job while going to school I worked in a paper mill, and they, like most paper mills end up with an excess of lignin.
Looking for all the world like the brown liquid a grass hopper belches up on you when it fears for its life, it was a slightly sticky brown liquid that the paper mill some how convinced the county to buy and spray on gravel roads to keep the dust down. You didn't want to drive on that road till it dried.
I'm not convinced that it did much good, because the first rain washed it all into the ditches. Nobody knew of any studies proving it was useful, and everybody was amazed they managed to find a market for that stuff right under their nose. Pretty soon every paper mill in the state was doing the same thing.
Nobody did much in the way of proving things NOT Harmful in those days, and I don't know if the use persists, although the wiki article suggests it does.
Now they want to make batteries out of it. But apparently they only want to use it as an electrode, not an electrolyte so it sounds like we will still be mining every source of lithium for decades.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.