Lithium-ion batteries that last longer in extreme cold

battery
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

When temperatures fall below freezing, cellphones need to be recharged frequently, and electric cars have shorter driving ranges. This is because their lithium-ion batteries' anodes get sluggish, holding less charge and draining energy quickly. To improve electrical performance in the extreme cold, researchers reporting in ACS Central Science have replaced the traditional graphite anode in a lithium-ion battery with a bumpy carbon-based material, which maintains its rechargeable storage capacity down to -35 C (-31 F).

Lithium-ion batteries are great for powering rechargeable electronics because they can store a lot of energy and have long lifespans. But when temps fall below freezing, these ' electrical performance declines, and when conditions are cold enough, they can fail to transfer any charge. It's why some people living in the U.S. Midwest have trouble with their in the dead of winter, and why it's risky to use these batteries in space explorations. Recently, scientists determined that the flat orientation of graphite in the anode is responsible for the drop in a 's energy storage capacity in the cold. So, Xi Wang, Jiannian Yao and colleagues wanted to modify the surface structure of a carbon-based material to improve the anode's charge transfer process.

To create the new material, the researchers heated a cobalt-containing zeolite imidazolate framework (known as ZIF-67) at high temperatures. The resulting 12-sided carbon nanospheres had bumpy surfaces that demonstrated excellent electrical charge transfer capabilities. Then the team tested the material's electrical performance as the anode, with lithium metal as the cathode, inside a coin-shaped battery. The anode demonstrated stable charging and discharging at temperatures from 25 C (77 F) to -20 C (-4 F) and maintained 85.9% of the room temperature energy storage capacity just below freezing. In comparison, lithium-ion batteries made with other carbon-based , including graphite and carbon nanotubes, held almost no charge at freezing temperatures. When the researchers dropped the air temperature to -35 C (-31 F), the anode made with bumpy nanospheres was still rechargeable, and during discharge, released nearly 100% of the charge put into the battery. Incorporating the bumpy nanosphere material into could open up the possibilities for using these energy sources at extremely low temperatures, the researchers say.

More information: Riemannian Surface on Carbon Anode Enables Li-ion Storage at -35 °C, ACS Central Science (2022). DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.2c00411

Journal information: ACS Central Science
Citation: Lithium-ion batteries that last longer in extreme cold (2022, June 8) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://techxplore.com/news/2022-06-lithium-ion-batteries-longer-extreme-cold.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Lithium-ion battery charged to 60% in 5.6 minutes with ordered anode

127 shares

Feedback to editors