https://www.greenoptimistic.com/pnnl-ev-battery-lifespan-range-20180402/
PNNL’s New EV Battery: 7x Longer Lifespan, 2 to 3 Times Longer Range
April 2, 2018  Janina Lazo-Cruz

The transport sector remains a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions
and electric vehicles can eliminate this generation of pollutants. Still,
there are factors that remain challenges to electric mobility.

The miles an electric vehicle can drive before it runs out of charge is
almost half of the miles a petroleum/diesel-fueled vehicle can drive before
it runs out of gas. Moreover, the availability of charging stations and the
service life of batteries are also reasons for car owners to choose
conventional vehicles.

So, efforts to improve electric mobility experience are seen globally and
currently, researchers from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL)
have developed a new formula for battery’s electrolyte solution to enhance
its performance unprecedentedly in terms of its service life and storage
capacity or an electric vehicle’s range.

In a separate project, engineers from the University of Colorado, Boulder
are currently developing a technology for electric vehicles that would allow
them to recharge wirelessly while running on the road.

Lithium-Metal vs Lithium-Ion Battery

Briefly, a battery is composed of two electrodes (anode and cathode) and an
electrolyte solution. The solution is a special liquid that contains charges
or electrolytes, which transports from one electrode to the other.

For lithium-ion batteries, the electrodes are made up of graphite, while
lithium-metal batteries use lithium metal as their electrodes. Comparing the
two electrode materials, lithium metal is a much better option as it can
store two to three times more energy than graphite.

This means that with lithium-metal batteries, electric vehicles can drive
two to three times farther in a single charge compared with the currently
commonly used lithium-ion batteries powering our personal electronic
devices. As such, they are considered as the “holy grail” of energy-storing
devices.
New Electrolyte Solution Brings 7 Times Longer Battery Lifespan and 2-3
Times Longer EV Range

Acknowledging this fact, PNNL focused on the current challenges and problems
of lithium-metal batteries. The main problem lies with its electrolyte
solution that easily corrodes its electrodes, causing shorter battery life
or lower number of recharging cycles.

Their study published in the journal Advanced Materials found out that
increasing the concentration of lithium-based salt in the electrolyte
solution forms a barrier around the electrodes, protecting them from
corrosion and ultimately, lengthening the battery life.

This technique, however, has two disadvantages: first, the lithium-based
salt is expensive and second, increasing the salt’s concentration results in
increasing the viscosity and lowering the conductivity of the electrolyte
solution.

So, the researchers had to optimize the salt concentration. PNNL senior
battery researcher Ji Guang “Jason” Zhang said, “We were trying to preserve
the advantage of the high concentration of salt, but offset the
disadvantages. By combining a fluorine-based solvent to dilute the high
concentration electrolyte, our team was able to significantly lower the
total lithium salt concentration yet keep its benefits.”

By adding the fluorine-based solvent into the electrolyte solution, the
lithium-based salts become clusters. These salt clusters, in effect,
function as balls of localized high-concentration lithium salt within the
solution that can still act as protection to electrodes from corrosion, but
its “cluster” form avoids its formation of dendrites.

Crystals, such as the lithium-based salt, tend to form dendrites or the
branch-like structure during crystallization. They are like snowflake
formation and frost patterns on a glass. Lithium-based salt dendrites are
undesirable for the battery as they cause short circuits and thus, end the
battery’s life.

The performance of this new formulation of electrolyte solution was tested
on an experimental battery cell as small as a watch battery. While a
conventional electrolyte solution can maintain its charging capability after
just 100 charge/discharge cycles, the newly developed electrolyte solution
can withstand up to 700 cycles. That is, the lifespan of a battery is 7
times more than the existing batteries.

Wireless Battery Charging

“On a highway, you could have one lane dedicated to charging,” said Khurram
Afridi, who leads a team of engineers and scientists at CU Boulder on
developing a technology that enables wireless transferring of electrical
energy and electric vehicles to charge on the go.

The concept of wireless transfer through electric fields is actually deemed
impossible because of the very small capacitance created by the large airgap
between a car and a road.  Nevertheless, for Afridi, “As a scientist, you
feel challenged by things that people tell you are impossible to do.”

Afridi said, “Everybody said that it’s not possible to transfer that much
energy through such a small capacitance. But we thought: What if we increase
the frequency of electric fields?”

Afridi and his team devised pairs of parallel metal plates with each pair
comprised of a bottom plate and a top plate separated by a 12-centimeter
gap. The top plates represent the receiving plate attached to a vehicle,
while the bottom plates are the transmitting plates to be fixed on the road.

The device was shown to transmit kilowatts of power at megahertz-scale
frequencies. “When we broke the thousand-watt barrier by sending energy
across the 12-centimeter gap, we were just exhilarated,” said Afridi.

Via EcoWatch [
https://www.ecowatch.com/ev-drive-time-2554094238.html
] ... [© greenoptimistic.com]




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