http://www.greenoptimistic.com/electric-vehicle-batteries-materials/
4 Battery Chemistries that Could Change Electric Vehicles
Annika Tostengard  September 18, 2015

[images  
http://www.greenoptimistic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Electric_Car_Battery_SE100AHA-300x199.jpg?1bcad4
A typical EV battery pack
]

Right now, lithium-ion technology is king when it comes to electric vehicle
batteries, but scientists are hard at work to find something even better.

In a matter of decades, new battery technology for cleanly-fueled cars will
drop prices and increase efficiency more than lithium-ion technology could
ever accomplish. In the future, look forward to letting these get you where
you need to go:

1. Solid State Batteries
You guessed correctly, this battery is made from solid parts. Solid state
batteries are therefore sturdier, and are less likely to leak electrolytes
or catch fire. They can withstand a greater range of temperatures, even
without cooling, and have longer lifetimes than current electric vehicle
batteries. Major car companies such as Toyota, Volkswagen and General Motors
are already developing solid state batteries for electric cars.

2. Aluminum-ion Batteries
This emerging technology is similar in design to lithium-ion batteries, but
uses aluminum for the anode instead of lithium. Aluminum-ion batteries can
charge faster and will be cheaper than anything available on the market
today. Scientists at Stanford recently improved cyclability using a graphite
cathode, so these batteries have a lot of promise.

3. Lithium-sulfur Batteries
Electric vehicle batteries need both  an anode and a cathode to work;
sending electrons back and forth between the two is what generates
electricity. Lithium-sulfur batteries replace the cathode, traditionally
made from lithium, with one made form sulfur-carbon. This makes them cheaper
and more efficient than current models, but they can have harmful
environmental effects when discarded. Scientists at NASA and Oxis Energy are
working to solve this problem.

4. Metal-air batteries
These batteries match an anode made from metal while the cathode is simply
ambient air that can pass an electrical current. Cathodes are heavy, so
removing them makes the batteries significantly less costly and saves
important resources for use elsewhere. However, it is difficult to get
enough oxygen into the cathode or get a sufficiently long life from the
battery, so time will tell if this great idea works out or not.
[© greenoptimistic.com]




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