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ENERGY TECH
Ultra-powerful batteries made safer, more efficient
by Staff Writers
Newark DE (SPX) Apr 12, 2018

Through simulations and experiments, the research team showed that a porous membrane stifled the formation of dendrites in lithium metal batteries.

From smartphones to electric vehicles, many of today's technologies run on lithium ion batteries. That means that consumers have to keep their chargers handy. An iPhone X battery only lasts for 21 hours of talk time, and Tesla's model S has a 335-mile range - which means you could expect to make it from Newark, Delaware to Providence, Rhode Island, but not all the way to Boston, on one charge.

Scientists all over the world - including even the inventor of lithium ion batteries himself, John Goodenough - are looking for ways to make rechargeable batteries safer, lighter, and more powerful.

Now, an international team of researchers led by Bingqing Wei, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Delaware and the director of the Center for Fuel Cells and Batteries, is doing work that could lay the foundation for more widespread use of lithium metal batteries that would have more capacity than the lithium ion batteries commonly used in consumer electronics today. The team developed a method to mitigate dendrite formation in lithium metal batteries, which they have described in a paper published in Nano Letters.

The promise (and pitfalls) of lithium metal batteries
In a lithium ion battery, the anode, or current-generating side, is made of a material, such as graphite, with lithium ions bound to it. The lithium ions flow to the cathode, or current-collecting side.

In a lithium metal battery, the anode is made of lithium metal. Electrons flow from the anode to the cathode to generate electricity. Rechargeable batteries made of lithium metal hold a lot of promise because lithium is the most electrically positive metal and has a very high capacity.

"Theoretically, lithium metal is one of the best choices for batteries, but it is hard to handle in practice," Wei said.

Lithium metal batteries have been inefficient, unstable, and even a fire hazard thus far. Their performance is hampered by lithium dendrites, formations that look like tiny stalagmites made of lithium deposits.

As a battery is being used, lithium ions collect on the anode. Over time, the lithium deposits become non-uniform, leading to the formations of these dendrites, which can cause the battery to short circuit.

A new understanding
Research groups around the world have tried a variety of techniques to suppress the formation and growth of these dendrites. After studying the literature, Wei had found that almost all of the techniques applied could be understood under an umbrella: Introducing a layer of porous material into the system could deter dendrites from collecting on the anode.

Using mathematical modeling, the research team found that a porous material suppressed the initiation and growth of dendrites. The dendrites that did form were 75 percent shorter than those that formed in systems that lacked the porous membrane.

To further prove the finding, the team fabricated a membrane made of tiny wires of porous silicon nitride that measured less than one millionth of a meter each. They then integrated this membrane into lithium metal cells in a battery and ran it for 3,000 hours. No dendrites grew.

"This fundamental understanding may not be limited to the silicon nitride we used," Wei said. "Other porous structures may do this too."

What's more, this principle may also extend to other battery systems, such as zinc- or potassium-based batteries, he said.

"In this field of metal-based batteries, this is up-to-date understanding," he said. "This is the kind of work that could have high impact."

Research paper


Related Links
University of Delaware
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com


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ENERGY TECH
New design produces true lithium-air battery
Chicago IL (SPX) Apr 10, 2018
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago and at Argonne National Laboratory have designed a new lithium-air battery that works in a natural-air environment and still functioned after a record-breaking 750 charge/discharge cycles. Their findings are reported in the journal Nature. "Our lithium-air battery design represents a revolution in the battery community," said Amin Salehi-Khojin, assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering and co-corresponding author of the paper ... read more

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