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Welcome speed_demon.
It is good to have members understanding what abstract formulation of physics is.
It is good to have members understanding what abstract formulation of physics is.
speed_demon said:Interesting to hear. Where do you feel we are at in terms of the lithium anode battery's life cycle?liveforphysics said:Lithium air IMHO has some many obstacles preventing it from being a realistic pathway to EV energy storage it seems kinda like a fantasy game to play in developing them.
Various solid-state electrolyte replacement technologies are something inevitable in the long term of conventional battery topology. In theory, it should enable the use of various 5v chemistries that currently decompose solvents much too rapidly, and/or depending on it's function, enable Mg++ chemistries and sulfur anode's and possibly even lend physical containment to silicon anodes to keep the structures together well enough in cycling ion insertion/removal physical stresses breaking the structure into pieces that don't connect to the current collector foil.
One point that needs to be made is that our best battery tech is still rather primitive compared to the energy density within common, century old liquid fuels like gasoline or diesel. We are advancing at a rapid rate towards much greater energy density architecture though!
Also, what branch of physics is it you live for? I myself have dabbled a bit with quantum mechanics.
I appreciate the response LFP, if you don't mind the abbreviation.liveforphysics said:Unfortunately, I think any metallic lithium anode is a non-starter ....
or impractical non-real-life-representative test results that will have little to no bearing on your applications needs.
liveforphysics said:Also, in-case there is anyone on ES who hasn't learned this yet, the mfg datasheet for a cell is created to be a home to contain various lies or impractical non-real-life-representative test results that will have little to no bearing on your applications needs. (with the possible exception being if you're designing laptop packs or something that is going to never see a peak discharge of even 1/3C rate)
speed_demon said:I appreciate the response LFP, if you don't mind the abbreviation.liveforphysics said:Unfortunately, I think any metallic lithium anode is a non-starter ....
or impractical non-real-life-representative test results that will have little to no bearing on your applications needs.
My question was concerning where you felt the Lithium battery technology as a whole is at in terms of maturation along the product life cycle, and what you feel is on the horizon for consumer battery tech beyond lithium. I apologize for not making my initial statement more concise.
Normally with these announcements its something like 3 or 4 times more powerful in 3 to 4 years. So I wouldn't get too excited about plans for something that might happen in 2020, posted as part of an announcement of "research collaboration". Particularly when the announcement states:Toyota has never been a big fan of lithium ion batteries, and has a plan in place to replace them with solid-state batteries that are three-to-four times more powerful. Toyota will commercialize solid-state batteries around 2020
....we are one step closer to achieving revolutionary developments in battery performance
Beginning in 2010, we plan to accelerate our research through collaboration with production technologies.
We are currently conducting research and development on two types of batteries, all-solid-state (shown in Figure 2) batteries and lithium-air batteries (shown in Figure 3).
By modifying liquefied electrolytes into solid electrolytes, it allows each cells to connect without the need for individual casing, which results in creating a more compact packaging.
Figure2 All-solid-state battery
Directly connected cells enables smaller package
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Figure 3 shows the example of lithium-air batteries which use oxygen in the air as the cathode active material. Therefore, it achieves weight savings and better energy density by changing negative-electrode material into metallic lithium from black lead than solid batteries.
Figure3 Lithium-air battery
Using oxygen in the air for the cathode and lithium metal for the anode allows for a smaller and lighter package.
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Through our success in reducing solid surface resistance, we are one step closer to achieving revolutionary developments in battery performance.
Through our analysis of liquid electrolytes and its influences, we have aimed our focus to clarify the reaction mechanisms of lithium-air batteries.
Charge–discharge curves of an all-solid-state battery consisting of a LiCoO2 cathode, a Li10GeP2S12 electrolyte and an In metal anode.
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The current density is 14 mA g−1. The battery has a discharge capacity of over 120 mA h g−1 and an excellent discharge efficiency of about 100% after the second cycle, demonstrating that Li10GeP2S12 is suitable as an electrolyte for all-solid-state batteries.
We need powered roads and wireless power transfer. Then we can stop dragging around the weight of the batteries and chargers.o00scorpion00o said:I
The Nissan Leaf for instance has around 85 mile range for the new one, maybe more maybe less for some people. But if you could charge that battery in 5 mins flat and it would last 2,000 cycles or 10+ years, that's what the automotive industry really needs.
Holocene said:We need powered roads and wireless power transfer. Then we can stop dragging around the weight of the batteries and chargers.
docnjoj said:Hey Mitch
What happens on the 9th cycle? I'm not sure I can handle an batt that only does eight![]()
otherDoc
So you think I should have said "I wouldn't worry about" instead of "I wouldn't get too excited about"MitchJi said:... I wouldn't get too excited about plans for something that might happen in 2020, posted as part of an announcement of "research collaboration".
Thanks to its revolutionary components, Phinergy’s aluminum-air energy systems use the energy released by the reaction of aluminum with oxygen to generate electric power.
Phinergy’s air electrodes, based on its proprietary silver based catalyst, have a unique and novel structure that allows oxygen into the electrode and the cell without letting CO2 in. As a result, the air electrodes are immune to carbonization related problems, and have a lifespan of thousands of operating hours.
When used in an aluminum-air battery, aluminum turns into aluminum hydroxide. Aluminum hydroxide can then be recycled in the aluminum factory, enabling a closed and sustainable life cycle.
Mar. 25, 2013 — Hybrid ribbons of vanadium oxide (VO2) and graphene may accelerate the development of high-power lithium-ion batteries suitable for electric cars and other demanding applications.
The Rice University lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan determined that the well-studied material is a superior cathode for batteries that could supply both high energy density and significant power density. The research appears online this month in the American Chemical Society journal Nano Letters.
The ribbons created at Rice are thousands of times thinner than a sheet of paper, yet have potential that far outweighs current materials for their ability to charge and discharge very quickly. Cathodes built into half-cells for testing at Rice fully charged and discharged in 20 seconds and retained more than 90 percent of their initial capacity after more than 1,000 cycles.
"This is the direction battery research is going, not only for something with high energy density but also high power density," Ajayan said. "It's somewhere between a battery and a supercapacitor."
The ribbons also have the advantage of using relatively abundant and cheap materials. "This is done through a very simple hydrothermal process, and I think it would be easily scalable to large quantities," he said.
Ajayan said vanadium oxide has long been considered a material with great potential, and in fact vanadium pentoxide has been used in lithium-ion batteries for its special structure and high capacity. But oxides are slow to charge and discharge, due to their low electrical conductivity. The high-conductivity graphene lattice that is literally baked in solves that problem nicely, he said, by serving as a speedy conduit for electrons and channels for ions.
The atom-thin graphene sheets bound to the crystals take up very little bulk. In the best samples made at Rice, fully 84 percent of the cathode's weight was the lithium-slurping VO2, which held 204 milliamp hours of energy per gram. The researchers, led by Rice graduate student Yongji Gong and lead author Shubin Yang, said they believe that to be among the best overall performance ever seen for lithium-ion battery electrodes.
"One challenge to production was controlling the conditions for the co-synthesis of VO2 ribbons with graphene," Yang said. The process involved suspending graphene oxide nanosheets with powdered vanadium pentoxide (layered vanadium oxide, with two atoms of vanadium and five of oxygen) in water and heating it in an autoclave for hours. The vanadium pentoxide was completely reduced to VO2, which crystallized into ribbons, while the graphene oxide was reduced to graphene, Yang said. The ribbons, with a web-like coating of graphene, were only about 10 nanometers thick, up to 600 nanometers wide and tens of micrometers in length.
"These ribbons were the building blocks of the three-dimensional architecture," Yang said. "This unique structure was favorable for the ultrafast diffusion of both lithium ions and electrons during charge and discharge processes. It was the key to the achievement of excellent electrochemical performance."
In testing the new material, Yang and Gong found its capacity for lithium storage remained stable after 200 cycles even at high temperatures (167 degrees Fahrenheit) at which other cathodes commonly decay, even at low charge-discharge rates.
"We think this is real progress in the development of cathode materials for high-power lithium-ion batteries," Ajayan said, suggesting the ribbons' ability to be dispersed in a solvent might make them suitable as a component in the paintable batteries developed in his lab.