https://phys.org/news/2018-07-electric-car-batteries-souped-up-fluorinated.html
Electric car batteries souped-up with fluorinated electrolytes for
longer-range driving
July 16, 2018  Martha Heil, University of Maryland

[image  
https://3c1703fe8d.site.internapcdn.net/newman/csz/news/800/2018/electriccarb.jpg
UMD researchers and partners have increased a rechargeable battery's
capacity. Credit: University of Maryland
]

The success of electric car batteries depends on the miles that can be
driven on a single charge, but the current crop of lithium-ion batteries are
reaching their natural limit of how much charge can be packed into any given
space, keeping drivers on a short tether. Now, researchers at the University
of Maryland (UMD), the U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL), and Argonne
National Laboratory (ANL) have figured out how to increase a rechargeable
battery's capacity by using aggressive electrodes and then stabilizing these
potentially dangerous electrode materials with a highly-fluorinated
electrolyte.

A peer-reviewed paper based on the research was published July 16 in the
journal Nature Nanotechnology.

"We have created a fluorine-based electrolyte to enable a lithium-metal
anode, which is known to be notoriously unstable, and demonstrated a battery
that lasts up to a thousand cycles with high capacity," said co-first
authors Xiulin Fan and Long Chen, postdoctoral researchers at UMD's A. James
Clark School of Engineering.

The new batteries can thus charge and discharge many times over without
losing the ability to provide a reliable and high quality stream of energy.
Even after a thousand charge cycles, the fluorine enhanced electrolytes
ensured 93% of battery capacity, which the authors call "unprecedented."
This means that a car running on this technology would reliably drive the
same number of miles for many years.

"The cycle lives they achieved with the given electrode materials and
operation voltage windows sound 'unprecedented.' This work is a [sic] great
progress forward in the battery field in the direction of increasing the
energy density, although further tuning might be needed to meet various
standards for commercialization," said Jang Wook Choi, an associate
professor in chemical and biological engineering at Seoul National
University in South Korea. Choi was not involved with the research.

The team demonstrated the batteries in coin-cell shape like a watch battery
for testing and is working with industry partners to use the electrolytes
for a high voltage battery.

These aggressive materials, such as the lithium-metal anode and nickel and
high-voltage cathode materials, are called such because they react strongly
with other material, meaning that they can hold a lot of energy but also
tend to "eat up" any other elements they're partnered with, rendering them
unusable.

Chunsheng Wang, professor in the Clark School's Department of Chemical and
Biochemical Engineering, has collaborated with Kang Xu at ARL and Khalil
Amine at ANL on these new electrolyte materials for batteries. Since each
element on the periodic table has a different arrangement of electrons, Wang
studies how each permutation of chemical structure can be an advantage or
disadvantage in a battery. He and Xu also head up an
industry-university-government collaborative effort called the Center for
Research in Extreme Batteries, which aims to unite companies that need
batteries for unusual uses with the researchers who can invent them.

"The aim of the research was to overcome the capacity limitation that
lithium-ion batteries experience. We identified that fluorine is the key
ingredient that ensures these aggressive chemistries behave reversibly to
yield long battery life. An additional merit of fluorine is that it makes
the usually combustible electrolytes completely unable to catch on fire,"
said Wang.

The team captured video of several battery cells catching on fire in
instants, but the fluorine battery was impervious.

The high population of fluorine-containing species in the interphases is the
key to making the material work, even though results have varied for
different researchers in the past regarding the fluorination.

"You can find evidences from literature that either support or disapprove
fluorine as good ingredient in interphases," said Xu, laboratory fellow and
team leader of the research at ARL. "What we learned in this work is that,
in most cases it is not just what chemical ingredients you have in the
interphase, but how they are arranged and distributed."

Explore further: Research hints at double the driving range for electric
vehicles

More information: Xiulin Fan et al, Non-flammable electrolyte enables
Li-metal batteries with aggressive cathode chemistries, Nature
Nanotechnology (2018). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-018-0183-2 [
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41565-018-0183-2
]
Journal reference: Nature Nanotechnology [
https://phys.org/journals/nature-nanotechnology/
] ... [© phys.org]


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https://cleantechnica.com/2018/07/13/alexander-dennis-selects-proterra-to-build-first-electric-double-deck-transit-bus-for-north-america/
Alexander Dennis Selects Proterra To Build First Electric Double July 13th,
2018  Deck Transit Bus For North America
The two ADI Enviro500 units in the order will go into service at Foothill
Transit in Q4 2019 and complement FT’s existing ele...
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