The BBC News website is carrying a report about a new way of making lithium batteries which could massively speed up their charging time.
It's unclear quite how long the charging would take with the new
batteries: the BBC report talks about "20 seconds" in comparison to "6
minutes", so they clearly weren't testing a full capacity battery.
However, if we scale that up, a 90 minute charge on current batteries
would be reduced to 5 minutes with the new battery type.
Battery that 'charges in seconds'
The material is cheap, and batteries made with it are less likely to explode
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A new manufacturing method for
lithium-ion batteries could lead to smaller, lighter batteries that can
be charged in just seconds.
Batteries that discharge just as quickly would be useful for
electric and hybrid cars, where a quick jolt of charge is needed for
acceleration.
The approach only requires simple changes to the production process of a well-known material.
The new research is reported in the scientific journal Nature.
Because of the electronic punch that they pack,
gram for gram, lithium-ion batteries are the most common rechargeable
batteries found in consumer electronics, such as laptops.
However, they take a long time to charge; researchers have
assumed until now that there was a speed limit on the lithium ions and
electrons that pass through the batteries to form an electrochemical
circuit.
Tiny holes
Gerbrand Ceder, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT), US, and his colleagues used a computer simulation to model the
movements of ions and electrons in a variant of the standard lithium
material known as lithium iron phosphate.
The simulation indicated that ions were moving at great speed.
"If transport of the lithium ions was so fast, something else had to be the problem," Professor Ceder said.
That problem turned out to be the way ions passed through the material.
They pass through minuscule tunnels, whose entrances are present at the surface of the material.
However, the team discovered that to get into these channels,
the ions had to be positioned directly in front of the tunnel entrances
- if they were not, they could not get through.
The solution, Ceder discovered, was to engineer the material
such that it has a so-called "beltway" that guides the ions towards the
tunnel entrances.
Traffic management
A prototype battery made using the new technique could be
charged in less than 20 seconds - in comparison to six minutes with an
untreated sample of the material.
Most commercial batteries use a material made up of lithium and
cobalt, but lithium iron phosphate does not suffer from overheating -
something that has affected laptop and mp3 player batteries in a number
of incidents.
Hybrid cars could benefit from a quick discharge as much as a quick charge
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Even though it is cheap, lithium iron phosphate has until now
received little attention because lithium cobalt batteries can store
slightly more charge for a given weight.
However, the researchers found that their new material does not
lose its capacity to charge over time in the way that standard lithium
ion batteries do.
That means that the excess material put into standard batteries
to compensate for this loss over time is not necessary, leading to
smaller, lighter batteries with phenomenal charging rates.
What is more, because there are relatively few changes to the
standard manufacturing process, Professor Ceder believes the new
battery material could make it to market within two to three years.
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