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    Home»Technology»Why Do Batteries Wear Out? Scientists Finally Crack the Code
    Technology

    Why Do Batteries Wear Out? Scientists Finally Crack the Code

    By University of Colorado at BoulderSeptember 12, 20241 Comment5 Mins Read
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    Hot and Cold Battery Technology
    University of Colorado Boulder researchers have identified a mechanism that causes battery degradation, a breakthrough that could lead to longer-lasting and more efficient lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and renewable energy storage.

    Researchers have discovered the fundamental mechanism behind battery degradation, which could revolutionize the design of lithium-ion batteries, enhancing the driving range and lifespan of electric vehicles (EVs) and advancing clean energy storage solutions.

    The study identifies how hydrogen molecules interfere with lithium ions in the battery, offering insights that could lead to more sustainable and cost-effective battery technology.

    Uncovering the Mechanism of Battery Aging

    Batteries lose capacity over time, which is why older cell phones run out of power more quickly. This common phenomenon, however, is not completely understood.

    Now, an international team of researchers, led by an engineer at the University of Colorado Boulder, has revealed the underlying mechanism behind such battery degradation. Their discovery could help scientists to develop better batteries, which would allow electric vehicles to run farther and last longer, while also advancing energy storage technologies that would accelerate the transition to clean energy.

    The findings were published today (September 12) in the journal Science.

    Li-Ion Battery Coin Cell Testing
    Michael Toney and team tested Li-ion battery coin cells for capacity loss over time. Credit: Jesse Peterson/CU Boulder

    Implications for Renewable Energy and Electric Vehicles

    “We are helping to advance lithium-ion batteries by figuring out the molecular level processes involved in their degradation,” said Michael Toney, the paper’s corresponding author and a professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering. “Having a better battery is very important in shifting our energy infrastructure away from fossil fuels to more renewable energy sources.”

    Engineers have been working for years on designing lithium-ion batteries—the most common type of rechargeable batteries—without cobalt. Cobalt is an expensive rare mineral, and its mining process has been linked to grave environmental and human rights concerns. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, which supplies more than half of the world’s cobalt, many miners are children.

    So far, scientists have tried to use other elements such as nickel and magnesium to replace cobalt in lithium-ion batteries. But these batteries have even higher rates of self-discharge, which is when the battery’s internal chemical reactions reduce stored energy and degrade its capacity over time. Because of self-discharge, most EV batteries have a lifespan of seven to 10 years before they need to be replaced.

    Investigating Self-Discharge in Batteries

    Toney, who is also a fellow of the Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute, and his team set out to investigate the cause of self-discharge. In a typical lithium-ion battery, lithium ions, which carry charges, move from one side of the battery, called the anode, to the other side, called the cathode, through a medium called an electrolyte. During this process, the flow of these charged ions forms an electric current that powers electronic devices. Charging the battery reverses the flow of the charged ions and returns them to the anode.

    Previously, scientists thought batteries self-discharge because not all lithium ions return to the anode when charging, reducing the number of charged ions available to form the current and provide power.

    Using the Advanced Photon Source, a powerful X-ray machine, at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, the research team discovered that hydrogen molecules from the battery’s electrolyte would move to cathode and take the spots that lithium ions normally bind to. As a result, lithium ions have fewer places to bind to on the cathode, weakening the electric current and decreasing the battery’s capacity.

    The Road Ahead for Electric Vehicle Batteries

    Transportation is the single largest source of greenhouse gases generated in the U.S, accounting for 28% of the country’s emissions in 2021. In an effort to reduce emissions, many automakers have committed to moving away from developing gasoline cars to produce more EVs instead. But EV manufacturers face a host of challenges, including limited driving range, higher production costs, and shorter battery lifespan than conventional vehicles. In the U.S. market, a typical all-electric car can run about 250 miles in a single charge, about 60% that of a gasoline car. Toney said that the new study has the potential to address all of these issues.

    “All consumers want cars with a large driving range. Some of these low cobalt-containing batteries can potentially provide a higher driving range, but we also need to make sure they don’t fall apart in a short period of time,” he said, noting that reducing cobalt can also reduce costs and address human rights and energy justice concerns.

    Strategies for Enhancing Battery Longevity

    With a better understanding of the self-discharge mechanism, engineers can explore a few ways to prevent the process, such as coating the cathode with a special material to block hydrogen molecules or using a different electrolyte.

    “Now that we understand what is causing batteries to degrade, we can inform the battery chemistry community on what needs to be improved when designing in batteries,” Toney said.

    Reference: “Solvent-mediated oxide hydrogenation in layered cathodes” 12 September 2024, Science.
    DOI: 10.1126/science.adg4687

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    Battery Technology Energy Lithium-Ion Transportation University of Colorado at Boulder
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    1 Comment

    1. Boba on September 12, 2024 5:19 pm

      Great, now get it done!

      Reply
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