...here is an article which may be of interest to listmembers...

http://www.nature.com/nsu/020916/020916-20.html

New material could make rechargeable lithium batteries last longer. 
23 September 2002 
PHILIP BALL 

A new electrode material for rechargeable lithium batteries could mean 
smaller, lighter, longer-lasting laptops and cell phones. 

Yet-Ming Chiang and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 
Cambridge, Massachusetts, have made a substance called lithium phospho-olivine 
conduct electricity much better than the materials currently used as terminals 
in commercial batteries1. 

"This may allow the development of lithium batteries with the highest power 
density yet," they say.

Until now sending current through lithium phospho-olivine has been like trying 
to send it through a lump of rock. "One of the main drawbacks with using these 
materials," said battery researchers Jean-Marie Tarascon and Michel Armand at 
the end of last year, "is their poor electrical conductivity.

Adding just one or two percent magnesium, aluminium, titanium or tungsten to 
lithium iron phosphate makes its conductivity rocket by about a million-fold, 
Chiang's team now reports. 

So far, preliminary tests on batteries with electrodes made from this lithium 
phospho-olivine suggest that their storage capacity, and the amount of power 
that they can deliver, should be 10-20 percent greater per gram, than current 
lithium batteries. 

In such a competitive industry, even a small improvement can make a big 
difference. Chiang and colleagues point out that such margins also improve the 
prospects of using lithium batteries in electric vehicles, where power and 
storage limitations are currently obstacles. 

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