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Nickel-zinc secondary batteries electrodes

There are many methods of fabricating the electrodes for these cell systems. The earliest commercially successful developments used nickel hydroxide [12054-48-7], Ni(OH)2, positive electrodes. These electrodes are commonly called nickel electrodes, disregarding the actual chemical composition. Alkaline cells using the copper oxide—zinc couple preceeded nickel batteries but the CuO system never functioned well as a secondary battery. It was, however, commercially available for many years as a primary battery (see Batteries-PRIMARY cells). [Pg.543]

The nickel-based systems have traditionally included the following systems -nickel-iron (Ni/Fe), nickel-cadmium (NiCd), nickel metal hydrides (NiMH), nickel hydrogen (Ni/H2), and nickel-zinc (Ni/Zn). Of these, the metal hydride chemistry has been the most successful in the secondary battery market. AU nickel systems are based on the use of a nickel oxide active material (undergoing one valence change from charge to discharge or vice-versa). The electrodes can be pocket type, sintered type, fibrous type, foam type, pasted type, or plastic roll-bonded type. All systems use an alkaline electrolyte, KOH. [Pg.183]


See other pages where Nickel-zinc secondary batteries electrodes is mentioned: [Pg.191]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.1553]    [Pg.1180]    [Pg.917]    [Pg.981]    [Pg.255]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.6 , Pg.31 ]




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