Water
Could Help Make Better Batteries
Images: livescience.com
Water could be the key to producing a cheaper, more
environmentally friendly and less dangerous way of making the lithium-ion batteries that
power so many everyday gadgets, researchers say.
Currently, rechargeable lithium-ion batteries are
typically found in mobile devices such as cellphones, laptops and tablet
computers, and they are increasingly being used to power hybrid and electric vehicles.
As their uses grow, scientists would like to manufacture the batteries in a
manner that's both less expensive and more environmentally friendly.
"The application of lithium-ion
batteries in electric vehicles is hindered by their high
cost," researcher Jianlin Li, a materials scientist at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, told TechNewsDaily. "For example, the cost of the lithium-ion
batteries in the Nissan Leaf and Chevy Colt is about $500 per kilowatt-hour,
which is almost five times of the target cost — $110 per kilowatt-hour — of an
electric vehicle lithium-ion battery set by the president's EV Everywhere Grand
Challenge."
Currently, more than 80 percent of the costs of making
lithium-ion batteries are due to materials and the processing of those
materials. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee
are now aiming to reduce the price of both of these factors.
All batteries generate electricity by flowing
electric current between two electrodes — a positively charged cathode and a
negatively charged anode. Cathodes make up about 70 percent of the total cost
of high-power batteries, and the organic solvent used to make the lithium ion
battery cathodes, N-methylpyrrolidone or NMP, is expensive, toxic and generates
flammable vapors. Making batteries with this solvent also requires
expensive, explosion-proof processing equipment and costly solvent
recovery and recycling systems.
Instead of using NMP, the researchers say they can replace
it with a system that uses water, which is much safer, greener and at least 150
times cheaper than the organic solvent.
Replacing NMP with water is tricky because the slurries, or
fluids containing the materials used to make the battery's electrodes, behaves
in very different ways if water is employed. For instance, water-based
slurries are typically not as good at coating the current collector, the material
that gathers electric charge from the electrode.
"While it seems quite straightforward to substitute
expensive and toxic NMP with water in battery manufacturing,
it is very complicated and requires extensive knowledge in science and
engineering to realize it," Li said.
The scientists employed a number of different tricks to get
water to work. For instance, treating the current collector with electrified plasma alters
its surface in ways that makes water-based slurries coat it better. Additives
in the slurries also help prevent the particles from clumpingtogether.
Previous work could help scientists manufacture lithium-ion
battery anodes using water. However, until now, "no one has been
successful with both anodes and cathodes," Li said.
Using this method, the researchers have created a battery
that features excellent performance comparable to conventional batteries.
Replacing NMP with water promises to reduce the overall costs of lithium ion
batteries by about one-eighth, and "the whole process is much more
environmentally benign," Li said. "This allows the battery
manufacturing more sustainable and affordable."
The scientists currently have a patent pending on their
technology. They detailed their latest findings online May 25 in the Journal of
Colloid and Interface Science.
Source: livescience.com
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