ENERGY TECH
Discovery could energize development of longer-lasting batteries
by Staff Writers
Dallas TX (SPX) May 25, 2016


File image.

A University of Texas at Dallas researcher has made a discovery that could open the door to cellphone and car batteries that last five times longer than current ones. Dr. Kyeongjae Cho, professor of materials science and engineering in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science, has discovered new catalyst materials for lithium-air batteries that jumpstart efforts at expanding battery capacity. The research was published in Nature Energy.

"There's huge promise in lithium-air batteries. However, despite the aggressive research being done by groups all over the world, those promises are not being delivered in real life," Cho said. "So this is very exciting progress. (UT Dallas graduate student) Yongping Zheng and our collaboration team have demonstrated that this problem can be solved. Hopefully, this discovery will revitalize research in this area and create momentum for further development."

Lithium-air (or lithium-oxygen) batteries "breathe" oxygen from the air to power the chemical reactions that release electricity, rather than storing an oxidizer internally like lithium-ion batteries do. Because of this, lithium-air batteries boast an energy density comparable to gasoline - with theoretical energy densities as much as 10 times that of current lithium-ion batteries, giving them tremendous potential for storage of renewable energy, particularly in applications such as mobile devices and electric cars.

For example, at one-fifth the cost and weight of those presently on the market, a lithium-air battery would allow an electric car to drive 400 miles on a single charge and a mobile phone to last a week without recharging.

Practical attempts to increase lithium-air battery capacity so far have not yielded great results, Cho said, despite efforts from major corporations and universities. Until now, these attempts have resulted in low efficiency and poor rate performance, instability and unwanted chemical reactions.

Cho and Zheng have introduced new research that focuses on the electrolyte catalysts inside the battery, which, when combined with oxygen, create chemical reactions that create battery capacity. They said soluble-type catalysts possess significant advantages over conventional solid catalysts, generally exhibiting much higher efficiency. In particular, they found that only certain organic materials can be utilized as a soluble catalyst.

Based on that background, Cho and Zheng have collaborated with researchers at Seoul National University to create a new catalyst for the lithium-air battery called dimethylphenazine, which possesses higher stability and increased voltage efficiency.

"The catalyst should enable the lithium-air battery to become a more practical energy storage solution," Zheng said.

According to Cho, his catalyst research should open the door to additional advances in technology. But he said it could take five to 10 years before the research translates into new batteries that can be used in consumer devices and electric vehicles.

Cho said he has been providing research updates to car manufacturers and telecommunications companies, and said there has been interest in his studies.

"Automobile and mobile device batteries are facing serious challenges because they need higher capacity," he said.

"This is a major step," Cho said. "Hopefully it will revitalize the interest in lithium-air battery research, creating momentum that can make this practical, rather than just an academic research study."

Co-authors on the study included researchers led by Dr. Kisuk Kang at Seoul National University. The research was funded by Hyundai Motor Company and National Research Foundation of Korea.

.


Related Links
University of Texas at Dallas
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
ENERGY TECH
Power up when the temperature is down
Hiroshima, Japan (SPX) May 24, 2016
Transporting power sources in the coldest places may be easier with a new re-chargeable, non-metallic battery from Japan. This "eco battery" could provide portable sources of power in environments like refrigerated factories or extreme winter environments. Chemists from Hiroshima University developed a new synthesis method for organic radical batteries that are re-chargeable and continue t ... read more


ENERGY TECH
Israel successfully tests missile defence system at sea: army

US missile shield in Romania goes live to Russian fury

US, Russia step up war of words over missile shield

US heralds Romania missile defence system as step forward

ENERGY TECH
Lockheed gets $321M Long Range Anti-Ship Missile contract

Thousands of Hellfire missiles for UAE

Egypt approved for Harpoon missile buy

U.S. Navy tests Raytheon's SeaRAM system

ENERGY TECH
A year of mystery swirls around latest X-37B mission

New flight test campaign for nEUROn combat drone

Airbus DS offers new SkyGhost ER mini drone

Battelle shows off DroneDefender at Navy Expo

ENERGY TECH
SpeedCast to build ground station for X-band Satcom Services in Asia-Pacific

Airbus Defence and Space opens a ground station in Australia for its Skynet military satellite

Navy orders additional Digital Modular Radios

How the Marriage of Third Offset, Better Buying Power Affects Industry

ENERGY TECH
Ukraine's National Guard gets new vehicles

Iran says it has equipped tanks with anti-TOW jamming system

BAE Systems, Czech company team for CV90 contract

U.S. MRAPs arrive in Egypt

ENERGY TECH
U.K. regulator cuts Rolls-Royce defense contract

White House threatens veto over House defense bill

Senate NDAA bill erases acquisition undersecretary

Nordic countries sign joint procurement agreement

ENERGY TECH
China rejects US claim of 'unsafe' spy plane intercept

NATO says all should avoid new arms race

NATO finalises build-up details to counter Russia

Chinese jets conduct 'unsafe' intercept of US spy plane: Pentagon

ENERGY TECH
Physicists create first metamaterial with rewritable magnetic ordering

Little ANTs: Researchers build the world's tiniest engine

New movies from the microcosmos

Ultra-long, one-dimensional carbon chains are synthesised for the first time