Pure lithium anode could triple battery life

Wednesday, 30 July, 2014

Stanford researchers are designing a pure lithium anode for rechargeable batteries.

All batteries have three basic components: an electrolyte to provide electrons, an anode to discharge those electrons, and a cathode to receive them. Today, we say we have lithium batteries, but that is only partly true. What we have are lithium-ion batteries. The lithium is in the electrolyte, but not in the anode. An anode of pure lithium would be a huge boost to battery efficiency.

“Of all the materials that one might use in an anode, lithium has the greatest potential. Some call it the Holy Grail,” said Yi Cui, a Stanford professor of materials science and engineering and leader of the research team.

“It is very lightweight and it has the highest energy density. You get more power per volume and weight, leading to lighter, smaller batteries with more power,” said Cui.

Lithium has major challenges that have made its use in anodes difficult, said Guangyuan Zheng, a doctoral candidate in Cui’s lab. “Many engineers had given up the search, but we found a way to protect the lithium from the problems that have plagued it for so long.” In addition to Cui and Zheng, the research team includes Steven Chu, the former US secretary of energy and Nobel laureate who recently resumed his professorship at Stanford.

The engineering challenge

In a paper published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, the researchers explain how they are overcoming the problems posed by lithium.

Most lithium-ion batteries, like those in a smart phone or hybrid car, work similarly. The key components include an anode, the negative pole from which electrons flow out and into a power-hungry device, and the cathode, where the electrons re-enter the battery once they have travelled through the circuit. Separating them is an electrolyte, a solid or liquid loaded with positively charged lithium ions that travel between the anode and cathode.

During charging, the positively charged lithium ions in the electrolyte are attracted to the negatively charged anode and the lithium accumulates on the anode. Today, the anode in a lithium-ion battery is actually made of graphite or silicon.

Engineers would like to use lithium for the anode, but so far they have been unable to do so. That’s because the lithium ions expand as they gather on the anode during charging.

All anode materials, including graphite and silicon, expand somewhat during charging, but not like lithium. Researchers say that lithium’s expansion during charging is “virtually infinite” relative to the other materials. Its expansion is also uneven, causing pits and cracks to form in the outer surface, like paint on the exterior of a balloon that is being inflated.

The resulting fissures on the surface of the anode allow the precious lithium ions to escape, forming hair-like or mossy growths, called dendrites. Dendrites, in turn, short circuit the battery and shorten its life.

Preventing this build-up is the first challenge of using lithium for the battery’s anode.

The second engineering challenge involves finding a way to deal with the fact that lithium anodes are highly chemically reactive with the electrolyte. It uses up the electrolyte and reduces battery life.

An additional problem is that the anode and electrolyte produce heat when they come into contact. Lithium batteries, including those in use today, can overheat to the point of fire, or even explosion. They are, therefore, a serious safety concern. The recent battery fires in Tesla cars and on Boeing’s Dreamliner jet plane are prominent examples of the challenges of lithium-ion batteries.

To solve these problems the Stanford researchers built a protective layer of interconnected carbon domes on top of their lithium anode. This layer is what the team has called a nanosphere. The Stanford team’s nanosphere layer resembles a honeycomb: it creates a flexible, uniform and non-reactive film that protects the unstable lithium from the drawbacks that have made it such a challenge. The carbon nanosphere wall is just 20 nanometres thick. It would take 5000 layers stacked one atop another to equal the width of a single human hair.

“The ideal protective layer for a lithium metal anode needs to be chemically stable to protect against the chemical reactions with the electrolyte and mechanically strong to withstand the expansion of the lithium during charge,” said Cui, who is a member of the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

The Stanford nanosphere layer is just that. It is made of amorphous carbon, which is chemically stable, yet strong and flexible so as to move freely up and down with the lithium as it expands and contracts during the battery's normal charge-discharge cycle.

Ideal within reach

In technical terms, the nanospheres improve the coulombic efficiency of the battery - a ratio of the amount of lithium that can be extracted from the anode when the battery is in use compared to the amount put in during charging. A single round of this give-and-take process is called a cycle.

Generally, to be commercially viable, a battery must have a coulombic efficiency of 99.9% or more, ideally over as many cycles as possible. Previous anodes of unprotected lithium metal achieved approximately 96% efficiency, which dropped to less than 50% in just 100 cycles - not nearly good enough. The Stanford team's new lithium metal anode achieves 99% efficiency even at 150 cycles.

"The difference between 99% and 96%, in battery terms, is huge," Cui said. "So, while we're not quite to that 99.9% threshold where we need to be, we're close and this is a significant improvement over any previous design. With some additional engineering and new electrolytes, we believe we can realise a practical and stable lithium metal anode that could power the next generation of rechargeable batteries."

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