Scientists get closer to creating an efficient solid-state lithium battery by Staff Writers Yekaterinburg, Russia (SPX) Oct 28, 2021
Scientists from the Institute of High-Temperature Electrochemistry of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IHTE UB RAS) and Ural Federal University have for the first time experimentally determined the optimal thickness of the aluminum layer between the lithium anode and the solid electrolyte. The Ural scientists' research brought the prospect of a fully solid-state lithium power source closer. An article about the work was published in the journal Solid State Ionics. The results will be used to create high-energy fully solid-state lithium power supplies. Their advantage over explosive batteries with liquid electrolytes is increased operational safety. In addition, solid-state batteries have a relatively low production cost, a shorter charging period, high energy density (energy storage capacity), lower self-discharge losses, and therefore a longer service life, compactness and lightness, safety, and environmental friendliness. The most promising area of application of fully solid-state batteries is the electric car industry. Electric cars will be able to travel long distances on a single charge. The critical problem in the development of a fully solid-state current source (in which the cathode, anode, and electrolyte are in a solid-state) is that due to the roughness of the electrode and electrolyte surfaces and, therefore, insufficient contact density and point contact at the interface between the electrode and electrolyte, high resistance occurs, including the polarization resistance of the cell (anode/solid electrolyte/cathode). The problem is eliminated by placing a buffer layer of aluminum between the lithium anode and the electrolyte: in this case, the interface (interface) between the anode and the electrolyte becomes more uniform and dense, the voids between them - much less, the interface resistance - lower, the current - more powerful and stable. It is not unimportant that aluminum is widespread and therefore has a low cost. The effect is enhanced if a layer of aluminum is applied to a lithium anode heated to the lithium melting point - over 180C (heating takes place in a stream of argon since in air lithium oxidizes and degrades very quickly). When aluminum is applied to the molten lithium, the area and density of contact between the anode and the electrolyte increase, the interface resistance and, consequently, the risk of degradation of the system elements decreases, and its current-conducting characteristics are noticeably improved. "Our task was to establish the optimum thickness of the aluminum layer. By vacuum deposition, samples of ceramics (i.e., solid electrolyte) were uniformly coated with layers of aluminum of different thicknesses - 10, 50, and 150 nanometers," says Evgeniya Ilyina, senior researcher at the Laboratory of Chemical Sources of the Institute of High Technologies of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. "The measurements made in Ural Federal University have shown that 150 nanometers aluminum deposition provides a denser contact between the anode and the electrolyte and leads to a more rapid formation of a stable interface between them, both at room temperature and at elevated temperature." It is fundamentally important that the use of aluminum does not lead to the formation of poorly conductive impurity phases that can impair the performance of the system, the scientists say. "Maximum efficiency is achieved in a few days, when, under the influence of current and heating, aluminum completely transforms into molten lithium, and instead of a lithium anode and aluminum layer, a lithium alloy with very little aluminum content is formed, directly contacting with electrolyte," specifies Viktoria Pryakhina, a researcher from the Department of Optoelectronics and Semiconductor Technology of the UrFU Research Institute of Physics and Applied Mathematics.
Research Report: "Influence of Al layer thickness on Li6.6Al0.05La3Zr1.75Nb0.25O12 solid electrolyte | Li anode interface in all-solid-state batteries"
Now everyone can build battery-free electronic devices Chicago IL (SPX) Sep 24, 2021 Last year, computer engineers from Northwestern University and Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) introduced the world's first battery-free Game Boy,which harvests both solar energy and the user's kinetic energy from button mashing to power an unlimited lifetime of game play. The same team now introduces a new platform that enables makers, hobbyists and novice programmers to build their own battery-free electronic devices that run with intermittent, harvested energy. Called BFree, the ... read more
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