Extending Next-Generation, Stable Lithium Metal Batteries
Next-generation lithium batteries that offer long-lasting, lightweight, and low-cost energy storage could revolutionize the industry but many challenges have prevented commercialization. Rechargeable lithium metal anodes play a key role in how well this new wave of lithium batteries function, but during battery operation they are highly susceptible to the growth of dendrites, microstructures that can lead to short-circuiting and catching on fire. Now, chemical engineers at Columbia University have found that alkali metal additives like potassium ions can prevent lithium microstructure proliferation during battery use. They used a combination of microscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance, and computational modeling in their research. The discovery could optimize electrolyte design for stable lithium metal batteries and enable energy storage for electric vehicles, houses during blackouts and power grid failures, and much more.
Transcript
00:00:00 so one of the things that we're trying to understand in my group is how we can improve battery safety and longevity and one of the ways that we go about doing that is understanding how lithium microstructures grow in lithium-ion batteries and the beautiful thing with something like mri or or nmr is we can examine how these structures grow we can look at at the atomic level what are the chemical components and spatial arrangement of these individual species that have grown on the surface of the electrode we're looking at individual bonds and molecules you can also run the experiments in imaging modes and see different features on the order of microns so we can actually see these individual features in an actual individual battery cell the ultimate goal is to be able to design electrolyte systems and new electrolyte formulations that prevent the growth of these lithium microstructures in the first place

