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High Porosity Nickel Foam (95-98%) – 3D Open Cell Structure for Li-Ion Battery Electrodes & Supercapacitors

High Porosity Nickel Foam (95-98%) – 3D Open Cell Structure for Li-Ion Battery Electrodes & Supercapacitors

MOQ: 5kg
Price: USD 50-60/㎡
Standard Packaging: Carton, Plywood pallet, Plywood box
Delivery Period: 20 days
Payment Method: L/C, T/T
Supply Capacity: 10 tons/month
Detail Information
Place of Origin
China
Brand Name
Niktech
Certification
ISO
Model Number
nickel foam
Porosity:
60% – 99.9% (standard: 90–98%)
Through‑hole Rate:
≥95%
Pores Per Inch (PPI):
5 – 130 PPI
Pore Size:
0.05 mm – 10 mm
Bulk Density:
0.15 – 0.45 g/cm³
Product Description

Nickel foam is a three‑dimensional, open‑cell porous metal structure characterized by extremely high porosity (typically 90–98%), low bulk density (0.15–0.45 g/cm³—only one‑fifth that of solid nickel), and a fully interconnected pore network with through‑hole rates exceeding 95%. This lightweight, electrically conductive scaffold offers a unique combination of high specific surface area (for enhanced catalytic activity and active material loading), excellent gas/liquid permeability, and mechanical flexibility, manufactured in conformity with ASTM B162 (for nickel purity ≥99.5%) and ASTM E23 (impact testing).

In energy storage, nickel foam serves as the industry‑standard current collector substrate for lithium‑ion battery anodes, nickel‑metal hydride (NiMH) battery electrodes, and high‑performance supercapacitors, where its 3D open architecture maximizes active material utilization and rate capability. For electrochemical catalysis, nickel foam functions as a highly efficient catalyst support for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in water electrolyzers; loaded with transition metal phosphides (e.g., Ni₂P), it reduces HER overpotential to below 50 mV, achieving a 40% efficiency gain over conventional carbon‑based carriers. In advanced filtration and separation, nickel foam removes heavy metal ions (Pb²⁺, Cd²⁺) from industrial wastewater and serves as a high‑temperature gas purification medium. For thermal and acoustic management, nickel foam provides 90 dB electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding effectiveness through thin sections and excellent sound absorption coefficients at high frequencies, making it ideal for aerospace cabin panels, electronic enclosures, and automotive noise reduction components. Across all these demanding sectors, nickel foam consistently delivers the reliability and performance that engineers require for next‑generation energy conversion and environmental technologies.

Chemical Composition & Purity Standards

 
 
Parameter Specification / Value Testing / Conformance Standard
Base Metal Element Nickel (Ni)
Purity Grade ≥99.5% (2N5) – 99.9% ASTM B162 (UNS N02200 / N02201)
Impurity Limits (typical) Fe ≤0.010%; C ≤0.030%; S ≤0.008%; Si ≤0.005%; Cu ≤0.005% ICP‑OES per ASTM E1473
Molecular Formula Ni
Molecular Weight 58.69 g/mol

Mechanical & Physical Property Specifications

Nickel foam is produced via electrodeposition and thermal sintering processes, yielding a uniform 3D network of interconnected nickel ligaments. Key specifications across different grades are summarized below:

 
 
Parameter Value Range Notes / Typical Grade
Porosity 60% – 99.9% (standard: 90–98%) Void volume fraction determines bulk density
Through‑hole rate ≥95% All pores interconnected for fluid/gas permeability
Pores per inch (PPI) 5 – 130 PPI 5–50 PPI (coarse); 50–130 PPI (fine); 110 PPI for fuel cell GDL
Pore size 0.05 mm – 10 mm Corresponds to 5–120 PPI range; ultra‑fine down to 0.05 mm
Bulk density 0.15 – 0.45 g/cm³ Approximately 1/5 to 1/30 of solid nickel (8.90 g/cm³)
Areal density 280 – 1,500 ±30 g/m² For thickness 0.5–2.5 mm
Thickness 0.5 mm – 30 mm (custom beyond 30 mm) Precision tolerance ±0.05 mm for thin gauges
Sheet size 500×500 mm, 500×1,000 mm Larger dimensions available on request
Melting point 1,453 – 1,455 °C Solid nickel base
Maximum service temperature ≥500 °C Continuous oxidative atmosphere
Temperature resistance peak >1,100 °C (short‑term) Resistant to thermal shock and oxidation
Electrical conductivity High (∼14% IACS equivalent of bulk) Dependent on relative density
Thermal conductivity (estimated) Up to 15.26 W/(m·K) (at 80% porosity) In PTFE‑infiltrated composites
EMI shielding effectiveness ∼90 dB Through relatively thin thickness section
Tensile strength 8 – 50 MPa (theoretical, porosity‑dependent) Mechanical strength decreases with increasing porosity
Maximum tensile (80% porosity) 50.4 ±6.8 MPa Measured in composite structures
Vickers hardness 638 MPa Bulk nickel foam ligament hardness
Shear strength 190 PSI (∼1.31 MPa)

Cross-Industry Application Guide

 
 
Application Sector Specific Use Cases Key Performance Drivers
Energy Storage (Batteries & Supercapacitors) Lithium‑ion battery anodes (current collector substrate); NiMH battery electrodes (positive electrode support); supercapacitor electrodes; cement‑based solid‑state nickel‑iron batteries for building energy storage High porosity (90–98%) for active material loading; high electronic conductivity; structural stability over charge/discharge cycles
Hydrogen Energy & Electrocatalysis PEM fuel cell gas diffusion layers (GDL); alkaline water electrolysis porous transport layers (PTL); HER/OER catalyst supports; Zn‑air battery bifunctional electrodes 3D open network maximizes triple‑phase boundary; reduces HER overpotential to <50 mV; 40% efficiency gain vs. graphene carriers; corrosion resistance in KOH electrolyte
EMI Shielding & Thermal Management Aerospace cabin acoustic panels; electronic equipment enclosures; EMI gaskets and grounding pads; phase change composites for heat dissipation 90 dB shielding effectiveness; high‑frequency sound absorption; lightweight (density 0.15–0.45 g/cm³); recyclable
Filtration & Separation Industrial gas/liquid coalescing filters; heavy metal adsorption (Pb²⁺, Cd²⁺, Hg²⁺) from wastewater; molten metal filters High gas/liquid permeability; corrosion resistance in acidic/alkaline media; uniform pore structure; high dirt‑holding capacity
Aerospace & Defense Acoustic liners for jet engine nacelles; lightweight structural panels; radar‑absorbing material (RAM) substrates High temperature resistance (>500 °C); low density for weight reduction; customizable porosity (10–130 PPI)
Automotive Electric vehicle (EV) battery current collectors; catalytic converter substrates; noise/vibration/harshness (NVH) reduction panels Vibration damping; sound absorption at high frequencies; meets FMVSS 215 crash safety standards
Catalyst Support Hydrogenation/dehydrogenation reactors; VOC oxidation catalysts; supported noble metal (Pt, Pd, Ru) catalyst beds High specific surface area; uniform temperature distribution; excellent thermal shock resistance
Heat Exchange Compact heat exchangers; electronic component cooling; LED thermal management High surface‑to‑volume ratio for efficient heat transfer; low pressure drop across foam structure

Regional Application Focus

 
 
Region Key Industries Application Drivers for Nickel Foam
Asia‑Pacific (China, Japan, South Korea, India, Southeast Asia) Battery manufacturing, consumer electronics, EV production World‘s largest battery electrode market (>70% of global nickel foam consumption). Indian lithium‑ion gigafactories (Gujarat, Telangana) and ASEAN EV battery supply chains prioritize ultra‑thin foam (0.5–2.0 mm, 95–110 PPI)
North America (USA, Canada) Aerospace, defense, hydrogen energy, medical devices AMS‑grade EMI shielding for military aircraft. PEM electrolyzer expansion (IRA incentives for green H₂) drives demand for 80–110 PPI fine‑pore foam as porous transport layer
Europe (Germany, France, UK, Netherlands) Hydrogen economy, automotive engineering EU Green Deal hydrogen targets. German automotive EV supply chains specify nickel foam for NiMH auxiliary batteries and PEM fuel cell components
Middle East (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar) Oil & gas, desalination, petrochemicals H₂S/CO₂ gas sweetening filters. Saudi NEOM green hydrogen project
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Chile) Mining, metal extraction Copper heap leaching filters, acidic mine water (pH 2–4) treatment, corrosion‑resistant fluid distributors
Africa (South Africa, Nigeria) Mining, water treatment Heavy metal ion (Pb²⁺, Cd²²⁺) adsorption filters for mine dewatering

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: What is the standard purity of nickel foam, and does it meet RoHS requirements for European export?

Nickel foam typically achieves nickel purity of 99.5% (2N5 grade) to 99.9%, with iron (Fe) ≤0.010%, carbon (C) ≤0.030%, sulfur (S) ≤0.008%, and other trace impurities tightly controlled per ASTM B162 specifications. European buyers may require EN 10204 Type 3.1 mill test certificates certifying chemical composition. Nickel foam contains no restricted substances under EU RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU (no lead, mercury, cadmium, or hexavalent chromium), and is fully compliant for all electrical and electronic applications in EU member states. A Safety Data Sheet (SDS) for nickel metal foam conforming to REACH Annex II requirements can be provided for each EU‑directed shipment.

Q2: How does porosity affect the mechanical strength of nickel foam, and what is the typical tensile strength range?

Porosity has an inverse relationship with mechanical strength: higher porosity reduces the volume fraction of solid nickel ligaments, thereby decreasing tensile strength. Standard nickel foam (porosity 90–98%) exhibits tensile strengths in the range of 8–50 MPa depending on pore size and relative density. For example, at 80% porosity, maximum tensile strength reaches 50.4 ±6.8 MPa, while compression strength is governed by a power‑law relationship with relative density (σ∝ρ¹·⁵ to ρ²·⁰). The material also demonstrates anisotropic behavior due to the flattening process during production, meaning tensile properties differ between the in‑plane and through‑thickness directions.

Q3: Can nickel foam be cut, welded, or bonded to other metals for assembly? What are the recommended fabrication techniques?

Nickel foam is readily fabricated using standard metalworking techniques. Laser cutting (fiber or CO₂) produces clean, burr‑free edges with minimal heat‑affected zone. Resistance spot welding effectively joins nickel foam to nickel or stainless steel current collector tabs. Ultrasonic welding is suitable for attaching thin nickel leads to foam electrodes. For bonding: electrically conductive silver‑epoxy adhesives (e.g., LOCTITE AA 3515) or nickel‑filled epoxies provide low‑resistance joints (typically <10 mΩ·cm²). Mechanical clamping or compression fittings are preferred for applications requiring frequent disassembly. Avoid high‑temperature brazing (>800 °C) as this may oxidize thin nickel ligaments and degrade foam structural integrity. All welding and bonding operations should use adequate local exhaust ventilation to prevent inhalation of fine particulate emissions generated during processing.

 
 
 
 
Products
PRODUCTS DETAILS
High Porosity Nickel Foam (95-98%) – 3D Open Cell Structure for Li-Ion Battery Electrodes & Supercapacitors
MOQ: 5kg
Price: USD 50-60/㎡
Standard Packaging: Carton, Plywood pallet, Plywood box
Delivery Period: 20 days
Payment Method: L/C, T/T
Supply Capacity: 10 tons/month
Detail Information
Place of Origin
China
Brand Name
Niktech
Certification
ISO
Model Number
nickel foam
Porosity:
60% – 99.9% (standard: 90–98%)
Through‑hole Rate:
≥95%
Pores Per Inch (PPI):
5 – 130 PPI
Pore Size:
0.05 mm – 10 mm
Bulk Density:
0.15 – 0.45 g/cm³
Minimum Order Quantity:
5kg
Price:
USD 50-60/㎡
Packaging Details:
Carton, Plywood pallet, Plywood box
Delivery Time:
20 days
Payment Terms:
L/C, T/T
Supply Ability:
10 tons/month
Product Description

Nickel foam is a three‑dimensional, open‑cell porous metal structure characterized by extremely high porosity (typically 90–98%), low bulk density (0.15–0.45 g/cm³—only one‑fifth that of solid nickel), and a fully interconnected pore network with through‑hole rates exceeding 95%. This lightweight, electrically conductive scaffold offers a unique combination of high specific surface area (for enhanced catalytic activity and active material loading), excellent gas/liquid permeability, and mechanical flexibility, manufactured in conformity with ASTM B162 (for nickel purity ≥99.5%) and ASTM E23 (impact testing).

In energy storage, nickel foam serves as the industry‑standard current collector substrate for lithium‑ion battery anodes, nickel‑metal hydride (NiMH) battery electrodes, and high‑performance supercapacitors, where its 3D open architecture maximizes active material utilization and rate capability. For electrochemical catalysis, nickel foam functions as a highly efficient catalyst support for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in water electrolyzers; loaded with transition metal phosphides (e.g., Ni₂P), it reduces HER overpotential to below 50 mV, achieving a 40% efficiency gain over conventional carbon‑based carriers. In advanced filtration and separation, nickel foam removes heavy metal ions (Pb²⁺, Cd²⁺) from industrial wastewater and serves as a high‑temperature gas purification medium. For thermal and acoustic management, nickel foam provides 90 dB electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding effectiveness through thin sections and excellent sound absorption coefficients at high frequencies, making it ideal for aerospace cabin panels, electronic enclosures, and automotive noise reduction components. Across all these demanding sectors, nickel foam consistently delivers the reliability and performance that engineers require for next‑generation energy conversion and environmental technologies.

Chemical Composition & Purity Standards

 
 
Parameter Specification / Value Testing / Conformance Standard
Base Metal Element Nickel (Ni)
Purity Grade ≥99.5% (2N5) – 99.9% ASTM B162 (UNS N02200 / N02201)
Impurity Limits (typical) Fe ≤0.010%; C ≤0.030%; S ≤0.008%; Si ≤0.005%; Cu ≤0.005% ICP‑OES per ASTM E1473
Molecular Formula Ni
Molecular Weight 58.69 g/mol

Mechanical & Physical Property Specifications

Nickel foam is produced via electrodeposition and thermal sintering processes, yielding a uniform 3D network of interconnected nickel ligaments. Key specifications across different grades are summarized below:

 
 
Parameter Value Range Notes / Typical Grade
Porosity 60% – 99.9% (standard: 90–98%) Void volume fraction determines bulk density
Through‑hole rate ≥95% All pores interconnected for fluid/gas permeability
Pores per inch (PPI) 5 – 130 PPI 5–50 PPI (coarse); 50–130 PPI (fine); 110 PPI for fuel cell GDL
Pore size 0.05 mm – 10 mm Corresponds to 5–120 PPI range; ultra‑fine down to 0.05 mm
Bulk density 0.15 – 0.45 g/cm³ Approximately 1/5 to 1/30 of solid nickel (8.90 g/cm³)
Areal density 280 – 1,500 ±30 g/m² For thickness 0.5–2.5 mm
Thickness 0.5 mm – 30 mm (custom beyond 30 mm) Precision tolerance ±0.05 mm for thin gauges
Sheet size 500×500 mm, 500×1,000 mm Larger dimensions available on request
Melting point 1,453 – 1,455 °C Solid nickel base
Maximum service temperature ≥500 °C Continuous oxidative atmosphere
Temperature resistance peak >1,100 °C (short‑term) Resistant to thermal shock and oxidation
Electrical conductivity High (∼14% IACS equivalent of bulk) Dependent on relative density
Thermal conductivity (estimated) Up to 15.26 W/(m·K) (at 80% porosity) In PTFE‑infiltrated composites
EMI shielding effectiveness ∼90 dB Through relatively thin thickness section
Tensile strength 8 – 50 MPa (theoretical, porosity‑dependent) Mechanical strength decreases with increasing porosity
Maximum tensile (80% porosity) 50.4 ±6.8 MPa Measured in composite structures
Vickers hardness 638 MPa Bulk nickel foam ligament hardness
Shear strength 190 PSI (∼1.31 MPa)

Cross-Industry Application Guide

 
 
Application Sector Specific Use Cases Key Performance Drivers
Energy Storage (Batteries & Supercapacitors) Lithium‑ion battery anodes (current collector substrate); NiMH battery electrodes (positive electrode support); supercapacitor electrodes; cement‑based solid‑state nickel‑iron batteries for building energy storage High porosity (90–98%) for active material loading; high electronic conductivity; structural stability over charge/discharge cycles
Hydrogen Energy & Electrocatalysis PEM fuel cell gas diffusion layers (GDL); alkaline water electrolysis porous transport layers (PTL); HER/OER catalyst supports; Zn‑air battery bifunctional electrodes 3D open network maximizes triple‑phase boundary; reduces HER overpotential to <50 mV; 40% efficiency gain vs. graphene carriers; corrosion resistance in KOH electrolyte
EMI Shielding & Thermal Management Aerospace cabin acoustic panels; electronic equipment enclosures; EMI gaskets and grounding pads; phase change composites for heat dissipation 90 dB shielding effectiveness; high‑frequency sound absorption; lightweight (density 0.15–0.45 g/cm³); recyclable
Filtration & Separation Industrial gas/liquid coalescing filters; heavy metal adsorption (Pb²⁺, Cd²⁺, Hg²⁺) from wastewater; molten metal filters High gas/liquid permeability; corrosion resistance in acidic/alkaline media; uniform pore structure; high dirt‑holding capacity
Aerospace & Defense Acoustic liners for jet engine nacelles; lightweight structural panels; radar‑absorbing material (RAM) substrates High temperature resistance (>500 °C); low density for weight reduction; customizable porosity (10–130 PPI)
Automotive Electric vehicle (EV) battery current collectors; catalytic converter substrates; noise/vibration/harshness (NVH) reduction panels Vibration damping; sound absorption at high frequencies; meets FMVSS 215 crash safety standards
Catalyst Support Hydrogenation/dehydrogenation reactors; VOC oxidation catalysts; supported noble metal (Pt, Pd, Ru) catalyst beds High specific surface area; uniform temperature distribution; excellent thermal shock resistance
Heat Exchange Compact heat exchangers; electronic component cooling; LED thermal management High surface‑to‑volume ratio for efficient heat transfer; low pressure drop across foam structure

Regional Application Focus

 
 
Region Key Industries Application Drivers for Nickel Foam
Asia‑Pacific (China, Japan, South Korea, India, Southeast Asia) Battery manufacturing, consumer electronics, EV production World‘s largest battery electrode market (>70% of global nickel foam consumption). Indian lithium‑ion gigafactories (Gujarat, Telangana) and ASEAN EV battery supply chains prioritize ultra‑thin foam (0.5–2.0 mm, 95–110 PPI)
North America (USA, Canada) Aerospace, defense, hydrogen energy, medical devices AMS‑grade EMI shielding for military aircraft. PEM electrolyzer expansion (IRA incentives for green H₂) drives demand for 80–110 PPI fine‑pore foam as porous transport layer
Europe (Germany, France, UK, Netherlands) Hydrogen economy, automotive engineering EU Green Deal hydrogen targets. German automotive EV supply chains specify nickel foam for NiMH auxiliary batteries and PEM fuel cell components
Middle East (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar) Oil & gas, desalination, petrochemicals H₂S/CO₂ gas sweetening filters. Saudi NEOM green hydrogen project
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Chile) Mining, metal extraction Copper heap leaching filters, acidic mine water (pH 2–4) treatment, corrosion‑resistant fluid distributors
Africa (South Africa, Nigeria) Mining, water treatment Heavy metal ion (Pb²⁺, Cd²²⁺) adsorption filters for mine dewatering

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: What is the standard purity of nickel foam, and does it meet RoHS requirements for European export?

Nickel foam typically achieves nickel purity of 99.5% (2N5 grade) to 99.9%, with iron (Fe) ≤0.010%, carbon (C) ≤0.030%, sulfur (S) ≤0.008%, and other trace impurities tightly controlled per ASTM B162 specifications. European buyers may require EN 10204 Type 3.1 mill test certificates certifying chemical composition. Nickel foam contains no restricted substances under EU RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU (no lead, mercury, cadmium, or hexavalent chromium), and is fully compliant for all electrical and electronic applications in EU member states. A Safety Data Sheet (SDS) for nickel metal foam conforming to REACH Annex II requirements can be provided for each EU‑directed shipment.

Q2: How does porosity affect the mechanical strength of nickel foam, and what is the typical tensile strength range?

Porosity has an inverse relationship with mechanical strength: higher porosity reduces the volume fraction of solid nickel ligaments, thereby decreasing tensile strength. Standard nickel foam (porosity 90–98%) exhibits tensile strengths in the range of 8–50 MPa depending on pore size and relative density. For example, at 80% porosity, maximum tensile strength reaches 50.4 ±6.8 MPa, while compression strength is governed by a power‑law relationship with relative density (σ∝ρ¹·⁵ to ρ²·⁰). The material also demonstrates anisotropic behavior due to the flattening process during production, meaning tensile properties differ between the in‑plane and through‑thickness directions.

Q3: Can nickel foam be cut, welded, or bonded to other metals for assembly? What are the recommended fabrication techniques?

Nickel foam is readily fabricated using standard metalworking techniques. Laser cutting (fiber or CO₂) produces clean, burr‑free edges with minimal heat‑affected zone. Resistance spot welding effectively joins nickel foam to nickel or stainless steel current collector tabs. Ultrasonic welding is suitable for attaching thin nickel leads to foam electrodes. For bonding: electrically conductive silver‑epoxy adhesives (e.g., LOCTITE AA 3515) or nickel‑filled epoxies provide low‑resistance joints (typically <10 mΩ·cm²). Mechanical clamping or compression fittings are preferred for applications requiring frequent disassembly. Avoid high‑temperature brazing (>800 °C) as this may oxidize thin nickel ligaments and degrade foam structural integrity. All welding and bonding operations should use adequate local exhaust ventilation to prevent inhalation of fine particulate emissions generated during processing.