
The Development of Biomass Based Materials for Battery Applications
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The rapid growth in the worldwide battery demand has accelerated the search for efficient, low cost, and sustainable batteries able to satisfy different markets, including portable electronics, the electrified mobility sector, and stationary applications. Several emerging battery technologies are considered to share the dominant position currently held by lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Among them, owing to their conceivable lower costs and higher sustainability, sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) have the potential to dominate the future stationary storage market and to contribute to the electrified transport sector. Despite major achievements in the last decade, several challenges remain in the rational design of high-performance SIB materials. This talk will focus on the development of biomass based (negative) electrodes or anode materials for SIB especially hard carbons.
Speakers

Arenst Andreas Arie
Associate Professor
The Chemical Engineering Department at Universitas Katolik Parahyangan, Bandung, Indonesia
Dr. Arenst Andreas Arie is an associate professor in The Chemical Engineering Department at Universitas Katolik Parahyangan, Bandung, Indonesia.
He earned his PhD in Energy and Power Conversion Engineering at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology, Seoul, South Korea in 2011. His research area focus on the synthesis and electrochemical characterizations of biomass based materials for various rechargeable battery
systems such as Li-Ion, Na-Ion, LiS and Supercapacitors.
Now, he is researching battery materials at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois as a Fulbright Visiting Scholar for 6 months. He is interested in the latest research on rechargeable batteries in the U.S.
Dr. Arie is an active member of The Electrochemical Society (ECS), International Society of Electrochemistry (ISE), Materials Research Society (MRS) and American Carbon Society
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