New Lithium Batteries Last Longer and Don'T Burst Into Flames
New Lithium Batteries Last Longer and Don'T Burst Into Flames
New Lithium Batteries Last Longer and Don'T Burst Into Flames
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BATTERIES
LITHIUM
MOBILE DEVICES
UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
“This could be a game-changer—a paradigm shift in how a battery operates,” says Jeff
Sakamoto, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan who
leads the work.
A demonstration
of a machine that uses heat to densify a ceramic known as LLZO at 1,225 degrees Celsius.
(Credit: Evan Dougherty/U. Michigan)
In the 1980s, rechargeable lithium metal batteries that used liquid electrolytes were considered
the next big thing, penetrating the market in early portable phones. But their propensity to
combust when charged led engineers in different directions. The lithium atoms that shuttle
between the electrodes tended to build tree-like filaments called dendrites on the electrode
surfaces, eventually shorting the battery and igniting the flammable electrolyte.
The lithium ion battery—a more stable, but less energy-dense technology—came out in 1991 and
quickly became the new standard. These batteries replaced lithium metal with graphite anodes,
which absorb the lithium and prevent dendrites from forming, but also come with performance
costs:
Graphite can hold only one lithium ion for every six carbon atoms, giving it a specific capacity
of approximately 350 milliampere hours per gram (mAh/g.) The lithium metal in a solid state
battery has a specific capacity of 3,800 mAh/g.
Current lithium ion batteries max out with a total energy density around 600 watt-hours per liter
(Wh/L) at the cell level. In principal, solid-state batteries can reach 1,200 Wh/L.
Nathan Taylor inspects a piece of lithium metal in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory building.
(Credit: Evan Dougherty/U. Michigan)
To solve lithium metal’s combustion problem, engineers created a ceramic layer that stabilizes
the surface—keeping dendrites from forming and preventing fires. It allows batteries to harness
the benefits of lithium metal—energy density and high-conductivity—without the dangers of
fires or degradation over time.
“WE’RE TALKING A FACTOR OF 10 INCREASE IN
CHARGING SPEED COMPARED TO PREVIOUS
REPORTS…”
“What we’ve come up with is a different approach—physically stabilizing the lithium metal
surface with a ceramic,” Sakamoto says. “It’s not combustible. We make it at over 1,800 degrees
Fahrenheit in air. And there’s no liquid, which is what typically fuels the battery fires you see.
You get rid of that fuel, you get rid of the combustion.”
In earlier solid state electrolyte tests, lithium metal grew through the ceramic electrolyte at low
charging rates, causing a short circuit, much like that in liquid cells. The researchers solved this
problem with chemical and mechanical treatments that provide a pristine surface for lithium to
plate evenly, effectively suppressing the formation of dendrites or filaments.
Not only does this improve safety, it enables a dramatic improvement in charging rates,
Sakamoto says.
“Up until now, the rates at which you could plate lithium would mean you’d have to charge a
lithium metal car battery over 20 to 50 hours (for full power),” Sakamoto says. “With this
breakthrough, we demonstrated we can charge the battery in 3 hours or less.
“We’re talking a factor of 10 increase in charging speed compared to previous reports for solid
state lithium metal batteries. We’re now on par with lithium ion cells in terms of charging rates,
but with additional benefits.”
That charge/recharge process is what inevitably leads to the eventual death of a lithium ion
battery. Repeatedly exchanging ions between the cathode and anode produces visible
degradation right out of the box.
In testing the ceramic electrolyte, however, researchers observed no visible degradation after
long term cycling, says Nathan Taylor, a postdoctoral fellow in mechanical engineering.
“We did the same test for 22 days,” he says. “The battery was just the same at the start as it was
at the end. We didn’t see any degradation. We aren’t aware of any other bulk solid state
electrolyte performing this well for this long.”
Bulk solid state electrolytes enable cells that are a drop-in replacement for current lithium ion
batteries and could leverage existing battery manufacturing technology. With the material
performance verified, the research group has begun producing thin solid electrolyte layers
required to meet solid state capacity targets.
The findings will appear in the Journal of Power Sources. The Advanced Research Project
Agency-Energy and the Department of Energy funded the research.
Source: University of Michigan