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Super-iron battery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Super-iron battery is a moniker for a proposed class of rechargeable electric battery. Such batteries feature cathodes composed of ferrate salts, commonly potassium ferrate (K
2
FeO
4
) or barium ferrate (BaFeO
4
).[1][2][3] One attraction to the proposed device is that the spent cathode would consist of a rust-like material, which is preferable to batteries based on toxic cadmium, manganese and nickel.[1][2][3] Another attraction is potentially higher energy capacity.[1]

See also

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Other iron-based batteries

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Other battery technologies

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Licht, S.; R. Tel-Vered "Rechargeable Fe(III/VI) super-iron cathodes" Chemical Communications, 2004, volume 6, p. 628-629. doi:10.1039/b400251b
  2. ^ a b Licht, Stuart; Wang, Yufei; Gourdin, Gerald (2009-06-04). "Enhancement of Reversible Nonaqueous Fe(III/VI) Cathodic Charge Transfer". The Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 113 (22): 9884–9891. doi:10.1021/jp902157u. ISSN 1932-7447.
  3. ^ a b Farmand, Maryam; Jiang, Dianlu; Wang, Baohui; Ghosh, Susanta; Ramaker, D. E.; Licht, Stuart (2011-09-01). "Super-iron nanoparticles with facile cathodic charge transfer". Electrochemistry Communications. 13 (9): 909–912. doi:10.1016/j.elecom.2011.03.039. ISSN 1388-2481.

Further reading

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