This New Aluminum Battery Can Charge Your Phone In 60 Seconds
A new rechargeable aluminium battery has been
developed by researchers in the US, and they’re saying the prototype can
charge a smartphone in 60 seconds, plus it’s more environmentally
friendly, durable, and cheaper than anything currently on the market.
And it won’t spontaneously burst into flames like certain widely used lithium-ion batteries are capable of...
"We
have developed a rechargeable aluminium battery that may replace
existing storage devices, such as alkaline batteries, which are bad for
the environment, and lithium-ion batteries, which occasionally burst
into flames," said one of the team members, chemist Hongjie Dai from
Stanford University, in a press release. "Our new battery won't catch fire, even if you drill through it."
The
new technology does something scientists around the world have been
chasing for decades - it puts aluminium to good use in the high-demand
battery industry. The pros for aluminium are many, including its
cheapness, availability, low-flammability, and high-charge storage
capacity. But the challenge in building a viable aluminium battery has
been in finding a material for the cathode -
the device through which the electrical current flows - that can
produce enough voltage to sustain it across a whole lot of charges.
Fortunately
for the Stanford team, they found the perfect material... by
accident. "People have tried different kinds of materials for the
cathode," said Dai."We
accidentally discovered that a simple solution is to use graphite,
which is basically carbon. In our study, we identified a few types of
graphite material that give us very good performance."
The team figured out that if they placed an aluminium anode -
the part through which the electrical current enters the device -
together with an graphite cathode, in a solution of ionic liquid
electrolyte. This arrangement was then placed inside a flexible,
polymer-coated pouch, which means it could be installed in a flexible
and bendy device.
"The electrolyte is basically a salt that's liquid at room temperature, so it's very safe," said one of the team,
graduate student Ming Gong. They tried their prototype out on some
smartphones and report that they could fully charge one in 60 seconds - a
vast improvement on the several hours it currently takes lithium-ion
batteries to charge our phones. Plus the battery lasts for more than
7,500 recharge cycles, while current lithium-ion batteries can only
withstand about 1,000 cycles. "This was the first time an ultra-fast
aluminium-ion battery was constructed with stability over thousands of
cycles," the team reports.
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The battery also offers a safer option for those who are a little uneasy about powering their devices using a potential fire hazard.
Case in point - United and Delta airlines have recently decided to ban
bulk lithium-battery shipments on passenger planes, because it’s just
not worth the risk.
"In our study, we have videos
showing that you can drill through the aluminium battery pouch, and it
will continue working for a while longer without catching fire,"Dai said. "But lithium batteries can go off in an unpredictable manner - in the air, the car or in your pocket."
Sounds
pretty perfect, right? It’s certainly promising, but before the
researchers can think about replacing all the batteries on the market,
they first need to get the voltage of their batteries to meet what
lithium-ion batteries can achieve.
"Our battery produces about half the voltage of a typical lithium battery," Dai said in the press release.
"But improving the cathode material could eventually increase the
voltage and energy density. Otherwise, our battery has everything else
you'd dream that a battery should have: inexpensive electrodes, good
safety, high-speed charging, flexibility and long cycle life. I see this
as a new battery in its early days. It's quite exciting."
The battery will be described in an upcoming edition of Nature.
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