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“Australian researchers announce lithium-sulfur battery breakthrough”

Researchers from Australia’s Monash University have created a new generation of 
lithium-sulfur batteries to provide a cheaper, cleaner and faster-charging 
energy storage solution that outlasts lithium-ion alternatives and is 
rechargeable hundreds of times without failing.

MARCH 7, 2022 DAVID CARROLL From pv magazine Australia  
https://www.pv-magazine.com/2022/03/07/australian-researchers-announce-lithium-sulfur-battery-breakthrough/


A team of researchers from Monash University’s Faculty of Engineering have 
redesigned the heart of a lithium-sulfur battery, creating a new interlayer 
that allows for exceptionally fast lithium transfer, as well as an improvement 
in the performance and lifetime of the batteries.

“It’s world-leading,” said Professor Matthew Hill, deputy head of the 
university’s Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.

“A lot of our research has been about making the battery more stable and 
lasting longer, so this particular discovery is really exciting.”

As the world’s switch to emissions-free electrification accelerates, lithium 
batteries are playing an increasingly vital role as energy storage tools to 
facilitate that transition.

Lithium-ion batteries are the dominant technology, but Hill said lithium-sulfur 
batteries already offer higher energy density and reduced costs.

They can store two to five times more energy per kilogram than the lithium-ion 
alternatives but previously, the electrodes in lithium-sulfur batteries 
deteriorated rapidly during the recharge process.

The research team believes it has fixed that issue by developing a battery 
interlayer that allows for very fast charging, as well as an improvement in the 
life and performance of the batteries.

“The interlayer stops polysulfides, a chemical that forms inside this type of 
battery, from moving across the battery; polysulfides interfere with the anode 
and shorten the battery life,” Hill said.

“The new interlayer overcomes the slower charge and discharge rates of previous 
generation lithium-sulfur batteries. It means the battery can be charged and 
discharged hundreds of times without failing.”

Hill said the key to this latest discovery was going against the accepted norms 
and conventions of lithium battery construction.

“It’s ground-breaking technology, because in a regular lithium battery there’s 
about half-a-dozen components that make up the battery,” he said.

“Most people research those, but hardly anyone has looked at changing the 
interlayer or separator in the middle. They tend to be fairly standardized, and 
until now we’ve assumed it didn’t matter too much if you changed them.

Now we’re saying it actually does; we’re going against the accepted convention.”

Hill said the development shapes as a game-changer for lithium-sulfur batteries 
which do not rely on metals like cobalt, nickel and manganese, which are 
critical minerals found in lithium-ion batteries.

“These batteries are not dependent on minerals that are going to lack supply as 
the electrification revolution proceeds, so this is another step towards 
cheaper, cleaner and higher performing batteries that could be made within 
Australia,” he said.

This latest breakthrough, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, comes 
just weeks after scientists in the United States announced that they have 
developed a lithium-sulfur battery using a commercially available carbonate 
electrolyte, that retained more than 80% of its initial capacity after 4000 
cycles.

The group used a vapor deposition process, which unexpectedly produced a form 
of sulfur that did not react with the electrolyte, overcoming one of the key 
challenges for this battery chemistry.

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https://www.faraday.ac.uk/lis-advantages/#:~:text=Lithium%2Dsulfur%20technology,are%20distinct%20possibilities

“Lithium-sulfur technology has the potential to offer cheaper, lighter-weight 
batteries that also offer safety advantages. After initially finding use in 
niche markets such as satellites, drones and military vehicles, the technology 
has the potential to transform aviation in the long-term. Electric aircraft 
offering short-range flights or vertical take-off and landing (including 
personalised aviation and flying taxis in cities) are distinct possibilities.”

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