Researchers have identified an alternative to lithium-based battery technology by developing sodium glassy electrodes capable of supporting long-duration, grid-scale energy storage.
From: University of Houston
May 31, 2022 -- Lithium-ion
batteries are currently the preferred technology to power electric vehicles,
but they're too expensive for long-duration grid-scale energy storage systems,
and lithium itself is becoming more challenging to access.
While lithium does have
many advantages -- high energy density and capacity to be combined with
renewable energy sources to support grid-level energy storage -- lithium
carbonate prices are at an all-time high. Contributing to the rising cost are
pandemic-related supply-chain bottlenecks, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and
increased demand from businesses. Additionally, many governments are hesitant
to green light lithium mines because of the high environmental costs and the
potential of human rights violations.
As governments and
industries all over the world are eager to find energy storage options to power
the clean energy transition, new research conducted at the University of
Houston and published in Nature Communications suggests
ambient temperature solid-state sodium-sulfur battery technology as a viable
alternative to lithium-based battery technology for grid-level energy storage
systems.
Yan Yao, Cullen
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and his colleagues developed
a homogeneous glassy electrolyte that enables reversible sodium plating and
stripping at a greater current density than previously possible.
"The quest for new
solid electrolytes for all-solid sodium batteries must concurrently be low
cost, easily fabricated, and have incredible mechanical and chemical
stability," said Yao, who is also principal investigator of the Texas
Center for Superconductivity at the University of Houston (TcSUH). "To
date, no single sodium solid electrolyte has been able to achieve all four of
these requirements at the same time."
The researchers found a
novel form of oxysulfide glass electrolyte that has the potential to satisfy
all of these requirements at the same time. A high-energy ball milling process
was used to create the electrolytes at room temperature.
"The oxysulfide
glass has a distinct microstructure, resulting in a completely homogeneous
glass structure," said Ye Zhang, who works as a research associate in
Yao's group. "At the interface between sodium metal and the electrolyte,
the solid electrolyte forms a self-passivating interphase that is essential for
reversible plating and stripping of sodium."
It has proven difficult
to achieve stable plating and stripping of sodium metal using a sulfide
electrolyte.
"Our study
overturned this perception by establishing not only the highest critical
current density among all Na-ion conducting sulfide-based solid electrolytes,
but also enabling high-performance ambient-temperature sodium-sulfur
batteries," Yao explained.
"The new
structural and compositional design strategies presented in this work provide a
new paradigm in the development of safe, low-cost, energy-dense, and
long-lifetime solid-state sodium batteries," Zhang added.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220531161314.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment