coursera-assistant-3d-printing-applications
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docs
/03_module-2-why-is-it-revolutionary
/04_the-revolutionaries
/05_3d-printed-battery-paul-braun.en.txt
[MUSIC] Hi. I'm standing here in front of | |
the Material Science building, here in the insuring quad of | |
the University of Illinois campus. We're here today to talk | |
to Professor Paul Braun. Paul's a professor of material science and | |
engineering here at the University of Illinois, and it's famous for being part | |
of the team that 3D printed a battery. Now this battery doesn't | |
look anything like this, but it performs a similar function. We're going to talk to Paul about | |
this battery, about 3D printing, and how this technology will | |
change our lives forever. Please join me. Hello Paul, thanks for | |
meeting with us today. >> My pleasure, thank you. >> Could you tell us a bit about yourself. >> I've been at the University of | |
Illinois since 1999 as a, on the faculty. Although, I actually was here from | |
1993-1998 as a graduate student and before that was at Cornell. After finishing my PhD at Illinois, then | |
I went to Bell Labs for a year, which is really when my work transformed from | |
things that would say more fundamental chemistry to thinking a lot more about | |
the technological impact of materials. And then, obviously, came back here | |
a year after that, where I've been, since I joined as an assistant professor. [SOUND] So my home department is | |
material science and engineering, and then I have a in chemistry, and we do | |
some work in the Beckman Institute and the MRL and | |
a number of the other labs on campus. Everything is made of something, and so material science is what | |
can you make things out of? How can you improve | |
the properties of materials? It could be, how do I make stronger | |
glass for say, a smartphone? How do I make faster computer chips, | |
more efficient light bulbs, better materials for | |
doing drug deliveries? You can really think about | |
materials science as the applied aspects of the chemistry and | |
physics. Where maybe we don't care as | |
much about the fundamentals, we still pay attention to them. But, how can we make these building | |
blocks that impact the world? [SOUND] 3D printing, the way that | |
we think about it, is very broad, in how can I three dimensionally | |
structure materials, in what we would call deterministic ways. And so, some of our work on batteries, | |
we start by doing electroplating. And so, we electroplate nickel. So, a very simple metal. These are easy to electroplate. But we electroplate that using | |
a very complicated polymer, that when we expose the light | |
generates some 3D super. Structure. It's akin to a lost-wax process. But then some people will directly print | |
much more complicated materials to start with, and so using print heads that can | |
extrude out materials that can withstand very high temperatures, or | |
that may cause cells to grow in certain ways if you want the three dimensionally | |
print scaffold for a human organ. [SOUND] We've been really excited by | |
this idea of 3D printing of a battery, and we realized if you zoom in | |
on the inside of a battery, really what you have is, | |
you have three important things. You have something that | |
can carry the electrons, because batteries have | |
to have electricity. You have something that can hold | |
onto the energy storage material, so somehow a battery stores | |
energy through chemistry. So that's in a material. And typically today, it uses lithium ions. So I have to have some way to | |
move these lithium ions around. And so what you need is, you need a three | |
dimensional structure that can conduct electricity, hold onto the active | |
energy storage material, and provide a really good way to move the ions between | |
the plus and minus sides of the electrode. And so | |
conventionally when people make a battery, they do it by casting and | |
they get a random assortment of materials. And sometimes you have good networks and | |
sometimes don't, and so the performance varies. But instead, if you could really build it | |
much the way you think of a city where you have super highways and local roads and | |
places for the buildings. And so, you'd define the architecture | |
to give you really efficient eye on transport, really efficient electron | |
transport and put the energy storage stuff just where you want it, | |
you can go into new performance metrics. Maybe really high power or | |
better energy, fast charging. So we started doing this in large form | |
batteries and this is something we've taken really far and now we have a start | |
up company working on that, but then, we said, wouldn't it be really interesting | |
if you could make small batteries that you could print and maybe put them | |
directly on a silicon a computer chip. And so, we had to think about | |
new paradigms in materials, because normal battery materials | |
use high temperatures. Grow some processes that aren't | |
compatible with computer chips. So we realized, we needed a way to | |
be able to 3D print the positive and negative terminals directly | |
onto some substrate. We were able to do this | |
using optical patterning. So taking this light sensitive polymer. Exposing it with light. When you expose it | |
multiple beams of light, the way that the light interacts, | |
creates a 3D pattern in the polymer. We then dissolve a way the polymer of that | |
hasn't reacted with the light, and so that leave behind what | |
looks to be like a sponge. We take that sponge and | |
then we do electroplating, the same way people use to | |
put chrome on a bumper. We put it in solution and | |
we fill all the pores with metal, so this is where the electrons can go. Then we remove the polymer, | |
which was the house initially. And now, | |
we do a second electroplating process, and a third electroplating process. One grows the positive | |
side of the battery, one grows the minus side of the battery. And you end up then with fingers | |
of positive and negative, if you look down on the battery like this. So now they're really close together, which means you can move | |
the electrons fast. They have lots of pores which | |
helps you move the electrons, but they're all connected with metal. So using that, we were able to make a battery which | |
was only a few millimeters on the side. So something like a tenth | |
of an inch on the side. And about five times | |
thinner than a human hair. And this battery could generate enough | |
power to light up an LED and flash an LED. [SOUND] This is not going to replace say, | |
a laptop battery. Where we think is that, | |
if we can move power down to the chip, now you could have a really small chip. Maybe a little bigger | |
than a grain of rice, and then that would have its own battery | |
built, right in with that chip. Which means, if you took that grain | |
of rice sized object, and you say, sprinkled it around and | |
each one had a little radio transmitter or a little blinking light on it, | |
you could power those wherever they are, without attaching any wires | |
off to the outside world. You're not going to have a lot of power, | |
this is batteries. Power is proportional to volume, so you | |
want a lot of power you get a big battery. You're not going to drive a car | |
on a tiny little battery. But if you make a battery small, | |
and you still want a lot of power, you need this 3D structure, so | |
you can move ions and electrons quickly. And so, that gives you the ability | |
to pulse out, and send information. So you could have this just sitting | |
all around and then, once a day, it would send just a little burst of | |
information that is only possible, because that micro battery's | |
sitting right by the computer chip. [SOUND] We'll take the applications | |
really in two space. One is the idea of | |
three-dimensionally structuring or 3D printing of the internal | |
components of a battery. You know, we see that applying at sort | |
of all [INAUDIBLE] scale, so even for sale a large car battery, | |
if you can control the internal structure, that may give you the ability to | |
charge the car in say 5 minutes, because now you provide really fast | |
ways that the ions can move and the electrons can move and | |
you can put power in to that. And the other regime is when | |
the batteries get very small. And here, we can really push | |
the performance metrics to the absolute, because we then control every detail | |
of the three-dimensional structure. And the applications in that space | |
are things like, small pills that you might swallow, that have enough power | |
to be able to transmit a radio signal. Out, or potentially deliver energy | |
in the body, to do some therapeutic. And, you can make that | |
a much smaller device, because the battery can still give | |
you a lot of power when it's small. There's the idea of basically, | |
the sensors everywhere, so instead of walking around a building and saying, I'll | |
pick the five places I want to sensor, I make them so small that | |
they're basically just the dust. And so | |
you can sprinkle them where you'd like and they can transmit until the battery dies, | |
and if they're small and environmentally friendly, you can sweep | |
them up, and maybe they just rust and disappear, so they turn right back into | |
the iron that's mined out of the earth. Those are just a list of | |
possible applications. [SOUND] I think you really will be able | |
to think about changing the design space of products, where today, | |
if you have a battery-powered product, you generally have to size | |
it to fit the battery. The microelectronics have | |
really been miniaturized but the batteries haven't been | |
equivalently miniaturized. So now, | |
instead of the device overall function and shape being limited by | |
the size of the battery. Now, the battery scales | |
with the electronics. We think if you're going to build | |
miniaturized electronic devices, the best place to put the power, | |
is to put it right on the chip. [SOUND] If I think about | |
the work in Batteries and other, like why would you want to print this? First of all, there's, of course, | |
the customization aspect. When you make one cell phone for | |
the masses, you have to limit function in exchange for | |
mass production. Can we give ourselves this diversity of | |
customization and retain the function. Because I don't think anyone's going to | |
a really kludgy cell phone which is four times bigger, just so | |
it has an extra axes of an accelerometer. But maybe they would be very interested if | |
the cell phone was designed to be certain shape that fit on their body or | |
in their clothes in a certain way. And that's not what the next person has, | |
so I think it's customization for function will be the, | |
where we can really get legs. Customization for aesthetics is fun, | |
but maybe not give us the legs we need. To find out more about what we're doing, a great place to start is | |
just my department webpage. So at University of Illinois, the Material Science department | |
has a webpage that lists faculty. I give a number of talks that | |
are sometimes more public interest oriented and | |
some of these can be found on the web. Then I also have a startup company | |
working on batteries named Xerion, and they have a webpage that talks about | |
some of that technology evolution. For detailed inquiries, | |
people often reach out directly. [SOUND] What I really | |
enjoyed is that this field is one that nobody is an expert. That it's a new area, it's a growing area. People have made contributions | |
coming in from everything, from really hardcore physics | |
through the chemistry through design and engineering. And I think it's really the diversity and the open-endedness of the field that | |
allows really the human imagination to sort of run wild, and | |
then reduce it to a tangible object. And that's different than most areas of | |
engineering, where you go to a catalog and you can pick out this gear and | |
this gear and that. And if they don't fit, | |
you are out of luck. I think it really opens up | |
the human imagination and how we can make the things the world uses. >> Thank you so much. >> Hey, thank you. | |
>> You did a great job. [MUSIC] [SOUND] |