New co-authored paper demonstrates potential ten-fold energy density increase over existing lithium-ion battery technologies.
Scientists fromΒ Honda Research InstituteΒ have collaborated with researchers atΒ California Institute of TechnologyΒ (Caltech) andΒ NASAβs Jet Propulsion LaboratoryΒ to develop a new battery chemistry that enables the use of materials with higher energy density and a more favorable environmental footprint than current battery technologies. The collective team of scientists co-authored a new paper on the topic that was published inΒ Science and is available atΒ http://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi/10.1126/science.aat7070.
The joint study reports that the research team has opened new doors in the development of high energy-density batteries capable of meeting rapidly growing energy storage needs by overcoming the current temperature limitations of fluoride-based battery (FIB) technology and by demonstrating the room-temperature operation of fluoride-ion based energy cells.
Fluoride-ion batteries offer promising new battery chemistry with up to ten times more energy density than currently available Lithium batteries,
said Dr. Christopher Brooks, Chief Scientist, Honda Research Institute, and a co-author of the paper.
Unlike Li-ion batteries, FIBs do not pose a safety risk due to overheating, and obtaining the source materials for FIBs creates considerably less environmental impact than the extraction process for lithium and cobalt.
FIBs provide an attractive alternative to other types of potential high-energy battery electrochemistry, such as those based on lithium- or metal hydride chemistries, which are generally limited by the inherent properties of their electrodes. Due to the low atomic weight ofΒ fluorine, rechargeable batteries based on the element could offer very high energy densitiesβup to 10 times greater than the theoretical values for lithium-ion technologies. However, while FIBs are considered a strong contender for the βnext-generationβ of high-density energy storage devices, they are limited by their required temperature requirements.
Currently, solid-stateΒ fluoride ion-conducting batteryΒ iterations need to operate at elevated temperaturesβabove 150 degrees Celsiusβto make the electrolyte fluoride-conducting. According to the paperβs authors, these limitations in the electrolyte have presented a significant challenge for achieving low-temperature operating FIBs.
To address this, the research team found a method for creating a fluoride-ion electrochemical cell capable of operating at room temperatureβa breakthrough made possible by a chemically stable liquid fluoride-conducting electrolyte with high ionic conductivity and a wide operating voltage. The scientists developed the electrolyte using dry tetraalkylammonium fluoride salts dissolved in an organic, fluorinated ether solvent. When paired with a composite cathode featuring a core-shell nanostructure of copper, lanthanum, and fluorine, the researchers demonstrated reversible electrochemical cycling at room temperature.
In the future, FIBs could power battery-electric vehicles. The higher-capacity nature of the battery makes it a good candidate for power products as well.