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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Zinc Battery Breakthrough Could Mean Safer, Lighter Cars and Smartphones Zinc Battery Breakthrough Could Mean Safer, Lighter Cars and Smartphones By Charles Q. Choi Posted 27 Apr 2017 | 20:04 GMT Image: U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Not only could rechargeable zinc-based batteries possibly store as much energy as lithium-ion batteries, they could also be safer, cheaper, smaller and lighter, new research finds. The results suggest zinc batteries could find use in mild hybrids (microhybrids), electric vehicles, electric bicycles, and eventually, perhaps smartphones and power grid storage. The researchers are now aggressively testing these batteries and exploring scaling up this technology. We feel we can have a battery ready for the market by the end of 2019, says Michael Burz, CEO of energy technology firm EnZinc in San Anselmo, Calif., which helped engineer the new batteries. When it comes to electric vehicles, the new batteries will be 30 to 50 percent cheaper than comparable lithium-ion systems, Burz says. Lithium-ion batteries have become notorious for safety incidents resulting from overheating, at times bursting into flames and even exploding. The U.S. Navy was researching alternative technologies because there's a Navy and a broader military concern with the safety of lithium-ion batterieson soldiers, on sailors, on platforms, says Debra Rolison, head of the advanced electrochemical materials section at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., and one of the researchers involved in the zinc breakthrough. Zinc-based batteries do not pose the same fire risk linked with lithium-ion batteries, and can in principle match or surpass them in terms of specific energy (energy per unit mass), as well as energy density (energy per unit volume). Moreover, zinc is cheap and widely available. All these features help explain why zinc-based batteries are the go-to global battery for single-use applications, Rolison says. However, zinc-based batteries are not considered rechargeable in practice due to their tendency to grow conductive whiskersdendritesinside the battery, which can grow long enough to cause short circuits, Rolison says. As such, zinc-based batteries typically die after several cycles of discharging and recharging, she explains. Now Rolison, Burz and their colleagues have developed a zinc-based battery whose internal structure can suppress dendrite formation. The zinc anode has a porous, sponge-like architecture that helps charge move uniformly across the entire structure when the battery discharges and recharges. Electric currents are more uniformly distributed within the sponge, making it physically difficult to form dendrites, says Joseph Parker, a research chemist at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory. Image: U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Zinc sponge before [left] and after 100 cycles testing. The zinc anodes are currently made by drying zinc emulsions in cylindrical molds overnight and baking the resulting disks in a furnace for a few hours. It's like we're baking muffins, Burz says. The researchers paired this zinc anode with a nickel cathode. Their experiments revealed the battery could withstand more than 50,000 brief cycles of discharging and recharging, similar to how lead-acid batteries are used in a start-stop manner in microhybrid vehicles. In addition, such a battery could deliver the same amount of energy in a smaller mass and volume: Poster Comment: This Zinc battery will become the new normal for generations to come. Goodbye Lithium Ion battery and you better start eating your hat Elon Musk. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Maybe time to sell lithium mining stock although so many of these research inventions rarely pan out.
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