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Scientists accidentally stumble on ‘holy grail' of batteries for electric vehicles

Posted by johnnorman on February 20, 2022 - 3:49am

Scientists accidentally stumble on ‘holy grail’ of batteries

for electric vehicles

 

Based on this breakthrough range anxiety will be a thing of the past once this scientific breakthough gets to the commercial production stages. The article appeared in The Independent UK on the 16th Feb and was written by Anthony Cuthbertson.

Scientists have come across an unexpected way to commercialise a breakthrough form of battery technology, opening up the possibilities for a new generation of long-range robots and electric vehicles.

Engineers at Drexel University in Philadelphia accidentally stumbled upon the technique while working on another solution to improve the

Overcoming this issue would not only radically improve the performance of battery-powered devices, it would also address some of the environment concerns that come with lithium-ion batteries, such as the sourcing and disposal of rare raw materials.

The research team at Drexel were looking at ways to redesign the battery’s cathode in order to prevent the damaging chemical reactions that take place during the charging process, but what they discovered instead was a rare chemical phase of sulfur that prevents the reaction.

 

The discovery prevents the formation of a chemical compound known as polysulfides and instead crystallises the sulfur into something called monoclinic gamma-phase sulfur, which had previously only been achieved at high temperatures in the lab.

“At first it was hard to believe that this is what we were detecting, because in all previous research monoclinic sulfur has been unstable under 95C,” said Rahul Pai, co-author of the research, which was published in the Nature journal Communications Chemistry.

“In the last century, there have only been a handful of studies that produced monoclinic gamma sulfur and it has only been stable for 20-30 minutes at most. But we had created it in a cathode that was undergoing thousands of cha

After 4,000 charge-discharge cycles over the course of a year, which is equivalent to 10 years of regular use, the sulfur cathode remained stable and had not degraded. As predicted, the battery’s capacity was more than three-fold that of a Li-ion battery.

The scientists are now working to fully understand the exact mechanism behind the ground-breaking process, with the hope of eventually commercialising the technology.

“This remains an exciting discovery and one that could open a number of doors for developing more sustainable and affordable battery technology,” said Dr Vibha Kalra, from Drexel University’s Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.

“Getting away from a dependence on lithium and other materials that are expensive and difficult to extract from the earth is a vital step for the development of batteries and expanding our ability to use renewable energy sources.”

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Adonel Lowings Thank you for letting us all know of the newest battery type that goes the distance.
February 20, 2022 at 5:42pm