Scientists can now make lithium-ion batteries last a lifetime
University of California doctoral student Mya Le Thai holds a nanowire device that has the potential to enable hundreds of thousands of recharges in a lithium-ion battery.
Credit: Steve Zylius/UCIThe discovery could lead to vastly longer lifespans for batteries in computers, smartphones, appliances, cars and spacecraft
Who says playing around is a waste of time?
Researchers at the University of California at Irvine (UCI) said that's exactly what they were doing when they discovered how to increase the tensile strength of nanowires that could be used to make lithium-ion batteries last virtually forever.
Researchers have pursued using nanowires in batteries for years because the filaments, thousands of times thinner than a human hair, are highly conductive and have a large surface area for the storage and transfer of electrons.
The problem they have encountered, however, is that nanowires are also extremely fragile and don't hold up well to repeated discharging and recharging, known as "cycling." For example, in a typical lithium-ion battery, they expand and grow brittle, which leads to cracking.
UCI doctoral candidate Mya Le Thai solved the brittleness conundrum by coating a gold nanowire in a manganese dioxide shell and encasing the assembly in an electrolyte made of a Plexiglas-like gel. The combination, they said, is reliable and resistant to failure.
Strategies have changed dramatically in the past few years, with new approaches like consolidating your
Read NowThe findings were published today in the American Chemical Society's Energy Letters. Hard work combined with serendipity paid off in this case, according to senior author Reginald Penner.
"Mya was playing around, and she coated this whole thing with a very thin gel layer and started to cycle it," Penner, chair of UCI's chemistry department, said in a statement. "She discovered that just by using this gel, she could cycle it hundreds of thousands of times without losing any capacity."
"That was crazy," he added, "because these things typically die in dramatic fashion after 5,000 or 6,000 or 7,000 cycles at most."
The researchers believe the gel plasticizes the metal oxide in the battery and gives it flexibility, preventing cracking.
Thai, the study's leader, cycled the nanowire-enhanced electrode up to 200,000 times over three months without detecting any loss of capacity or power and without fracturing any nanowires.
"All nanowire capacitors can be extended from 2000 to 8000 cycles to more than 100,000 cycles, simply by replacing a liquid electrolyte with a... gel electrolyte," the researchers wrote in their paper.
The result: commercial batteries that could last a lifetime in computers, smartphones, appliances, cars and spacecraft.
"The coated electrode holds its shape much better, making it a more reliable option," Thai said in a statement. "This research proves that a nanowire-based battery electrode can have a long lifetime and that we can make these kinds of batteries a reality."
Abbott Labs, a global healthcare company, is laying off about 180 IT employees after inking an...
Get our daily newsletter
A Virginia couple and four other people have been indicted for running an H-1B visa-for-sale scheme the...
Microsoft makes this full-of-fail "clarification" to its Windows support policy. With zero notice,...
-
White Paper
-
eBook
Sponsored -
White Paper
-
White Paper
-
Case Study
Sponsored
Google could face a record fine of up to €3 billion ($3.4 billion) as soon as next month as part of a...
Enterprise IT staffers in the IT Central Station community identify the most valuable features of data...
The courts ruled that APIs can be copyrighted. That was bad. Now, if APIs can’t be used with fair use,...
This still runs slow when installing the May 2016 patches. But, as before, there's a patch for that....
Copyright © 1994 - 2016 Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved.