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斯坦福研究人员开发的新涂层使锂金属电池更接近现实

斯坦福研究人员开发的新涂层使锂金属电池更接近现实

斯坦福领导的一个研究小组发明了一种新的涂层,这种涂层最终可以使轻质锂金属电池安全耐用,这将迎来下一代电动汽车。

可充电锂金属电池重新燃起了人们的希望——这是一个潜在的电池发电站,几十年来,由于其预期寿命短,偶尔会出现火灾死亡,而其可充电兄弟电池锂离子电池现在每年收入超过300亿美元。

一种新的涂层可以使轻质锂金属电池安全耐用,这有利于下一代电动汽车的发展。(图像信用:梭德斯托克)

斯坦福大学和SLAC国家加速器实验室的一组研究人员发明了一种涂层,它可以克服电池的一些缺陷发表于2006年8月26日焦耳

在实验室测试中,涂层显著延长了电池的寿命。它还通过极大地限制穿透电池正负两面隔板的微小针状结构(或枝晶)来解决燃烧问题。除了毁坏电池,枝晶还会在电池易燃液体中产生短路。锂离子电池偶尔也会有同样的问题,但是迄今为止枝晶还不是锂金属可充电电池的启动剂。

“我们正在解决锂金属电池的圣杯问题,”他说镇安堡他是化学工程教授,也是这篇论文的资深作者崔屹SLAC材料科学与工程和光子科学教授。鲍磊补充说,枝晶阻止了锂金属电池被用于可能是下一代电动汽车。

无极

锂金属电池每磅可以比锂离子电池多容纳至少三分之一的能量,而且重量也要轻得多,因为它们在带正电荷的一端使用轻质锂,而不是较重的石墨。崔说,如果它们更可靠,这些电池可以让从笔记本电脑到手机的便携式电子产品受益,但真正的支付污垢将是汽车。电动汽车最大的阻力是它们的电池消耗了大约四分之一的能量。这触及电动汽车系列和成本的核心。

PhD students David Mackanic, left, and Zhiao Yu in front of their battery tester.

主要作者和博士生大卫·麦凯尼克(左)和俞志浩在他们的电池测试仪前。俞敏洪手里拿着一盘已经测试过的细胞,他们称之为“电池墓地”(图像信用:马克·金)

“传统锂离子电池的容量已经发展到了极限,”斯坦福大学博士生大卫·麦凯尼克说,他是这项研究的共同主要作者。“因此,开发新型电池以满足现代电子设备的高能量密度要求至关重要。”

斯坦福和SLAC的团队测试了他们在标准锂金属电池带正电端——阳极——的涂层,这是树枝状晶体典型形成的地方。最终,他们将特殊涂层的阳极与其他市场上可买到的组件结合起来,创造出一种完全可运行的电池。经过160次循环后,他们的锂金属电池仍能提供第一次循环时85%的电能。普通的锂金属电池在多次循环后会释放30%的能量,即使不爆炸,也几乎没有用。

这种新的涂层通过产生一个分子网络来防止枝晶的形成,该网络将带电的锂离子均匀地输送到电极上。它防止了这些电池典型的不必要的化学反应,还减少了阳极上的化学物质积累,这种积累会迅速降低电池的供电能力。

“我们新的涂层设计使锂金属电池更加稳定,并有望进一步发展,”另一位合著者斯坦福博士生俞志浩说。

该集团目前正在改进其涂层设计,以提高容量保持能力,并在更多周期内测试电池。

崔说:“虽然在电动汽车中使用可能是最终目标,但商业化可能会从消费电子产品开始,首先展示电池的安全性。”

包振安和崔屹也是斯坦福大学的高级研究员Perecooourt能源研究所。斯坦福大学的其他研究人员包括秦剑化学工程助理教授;博士后学者冯大伟、康继兴、方敏雅·李、赤月泽·阿曼楚库、徐燕、王汉森和刘凯;学生韦斯利·迈克尔斯、裴志雄、陈澍承和曹育之;南京大学访问学者张秋红。
这项工作得到了美国能源部的支持办公室能量效率&可再生能源。使用的设施男子名存在支持者国家科学基金会。

A Stanford-led research team invented a new coating that could finally make lightweight lithium metal batteries safe and long lasting, which could usher in the next generation of electric vehicles.

Hope has been restored for the rechargeable lithium metal battery – a potential battery powerhouse relegated for decades to the laboratory by its short life expectancy and occasional fiery demise while its rechargeable sibling, the lithium-ion battery, now rakes in more than $30 billion a year.

A new coating could make lightweight lithium metal batteries safe and long lasting, a boon for development of next-generation electric vehicles. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

A team of researchers at Stanford University and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory has invented a coating that overcomes some of the battery’s defects, described in a paper published Aug. 26 in Joule.

In laboratory tests, the coating significantly extended the battery’s life. It also dealt with the combustion issue by greatly limiting the tiny needlelike structures – or dendrites – that pierce the separator between the battery’s positive and negative sides. In addition to ruining the battery, dendrites can create a short circuit within the battery’s flammable liquid. Lithium-ion batteries occasionally have the same problem, but dendrites have been a non-starter for lithium metal rechargeable batteries to date.

“We’re addressing the holy grail of lithium metal batteries,” said Zhenan Bao, a professor of chemical engineering, who is senior author of the paper along with Yi Cui, professor of materials science and engineering and of photon science at SLAC. Bao added that dendrites had prevented lithium metal batteries from being used in what may be the next generation of electric vehicles.

The promise

Lithium metal batteries can hold at least a third more power per pound as lithium-ion batteries do and are significantly lighter because they use lightweight lithium for the positively charged end rather than heavier graphite. If they were more reliable, these batteries could benefit portable electronics from notebook computers to cell phones, but the real pay dirt, Cui said, would be for cars. The biggest drag on electric vehicles is that their batteries spend about a fourth of their energy carrying themselves around. That gets to the heart of EV range and cost.

Lead authors and PhD students David Mackanic, left, and Zhiao Yu in front of their battery tester. Yu is holding a dish of already tested cells that they call the “battery graveyard.” (Image credit: Mark Golden)

“The capacity of conventional lithium-ion batteries has been developed almost as far as it can go,” said Stanford PhD student David Mackanic, co-lead author of the study. “So, it’s crucial to develop new kinds of batteries to fulfill the aggressive energy density requirements of modern electronic devices.”

The team from Stanford and SLAC tested their coating on the positively charged end – called the anode – of a standard lithium metal battery, which is where dendrites typically form. Ultimately, they combined their specially coated anodes with other commercially available components to create a fully operational battery. After 160 cycles, their lithium metal cells still delivered 85 percent of the power that they did in their first cycle. Regular lithium metal cells deliver about 30 percent after that many cycles, rendering them nearly useless even if they don’t explode.

The new coating prevents dendrites from forming by creating a network of molecules that deliver charged lithium ions to the electrode uniformly. It prevents unwanted chemical reactions typical for these batteries and also reduces a chemical buildup on the anode, which quickly devastates the battery’s ability to deliver power.

“Our new coating design makes lithium metal batteries stable and promising for further development,” said the other co-lead author, Stanford PhD student Zhiao Yu.

The group is now refining their coating design to increase capacity retention and testing cells over more cycles.

“While use in electric vehicles may be the ultimate goal,” said Cui, “commercialization would likely start with consumer electronics to demonstrate the battery’s safety first.”

Zhenan Bao and Yi Cui are also senior fellows at Stanford’s Precourt Institute for Energy. Other Stanford researchers include Jian Qin, assistant professor of chemical engineering; postdoctoral scholars Dawei Feng, Jiheong James Kang, Minah Lee, Chibueze Amanchukwu, Xuzhou Yan, Hansen Wang and Kai Liu; students Wesley Michaels, Allen Pei, Shucheng Chen and Yuchi Tsao; and visiting scholar Qiuhong Zhang from Nanjing University.
This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy. The facility used at Stanford is supported by 



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