Goliath Solid State Battery “Exceeded Our Expectations” On Safety Test
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     				Tina Casey			 		  		 			 				  Tell Us What You're Thinking!			  			  	 Sign up for   daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or   follow us on Google News! 
  The  race for the solid state EV battery of tomorrow is already  crowded,  and here comes yet another startup elbowing in. The UK firm  Ilika has  just dropped word that its new Goliath P1 prototype cells have  passed a  crucial safety test by failing to reach dangerously high heat  when  impaled by a nail.
   New Solid State Battery Passes The Test
    The nail test sounds crude enough but it is a foundational matter of   EV battery testing. Conventional lithium-ion batteries with liquid   electrolytes can catch fire when damaged. Energy storage innovators have   invested many years of hard work to engineer safety systems into EV   batteries, to help ensure they don’t. Fans of   new solid state technology anticipate that   the danger can be eliminated altogether (see more   solid state background here).
    “The test simulates a catastrophic incident that would typically  cause  energy-dense lithium-ion cells with lithium nickel manganese  cobalt  oxide (“NMC”) cathode chemistry to dangerously swell, rupture,  explode,  and catch fire in a process known as thermal runaway, often  leading to  temperatures above 600°C,” Ilika elaborates.
   In the nail test, the Goliath P1 cell maintained a temperature below 80°C while displaying no signs of explosion or fire.
   “These early results have exceeded our   expectations in terms of cell safety,”   enthused Dr. James Robinson, Lecturer in Advanced Propulsion at   University College London. Dr. Robinson also leads the UK Safebatt   Project, a multi-level collaboration under the umbrella of Oxford   University, aimed at understanding EV battery failure and   improving EV battery safety.
   Where Did This New Solid State Battery Come From?
   CleanTechnica  has spilled plenty of ink on the advantages of  solid state battery  technology, including faster charging and longer  range as well as  improved safety. Solid state technology also provides  for   a leaner approach to engineering, helping to decrease weight and wedge more battery into less space.
    There being no such thing as a free lunch, getting solid state   batteries out of the lab and into the hands of electric vehicle makers   has been a years-long process, which stands to reason considering that   battery innovators are trying to make electrons fly through a solid   material instead of simply swimming across a liquid.
    Nevertheless, the era of the solid state EV battery is near, and  Ilika  is good example of the pace of development. The company spun out  of  research at the School of Chemistry at the University of Southampton   twenty years ago, back in 2004. Over the following ten years the company   focused on materials development, attracting notice from Shell and   Toyota among other global firms.
   Ilika’s solid state journey  began in 2014 with a focus on tiny  batteries for medical implants and  industrial devices before finally  moving into the Goliath scale for EVs  in 2018. That was six years ago,  for those of you keeping score at  home.
   In a press statement regarding the newly passed nail test,  Dr.  Robinson indicated that the results represent early-stage testing,  and  there is more work to be done. However, he also observed that  Ilika is  on the right track. “While there is still further testing to  be  undertaken, there seems to be an inherent safety advantage in nail   penetration tests for this cell type over conventional state-of-the-art   cells,” he said.
   Investors also seem to think so. “The  company’s growth has been  financed by three rounds of venture capital,  an initial public offering  (IPO) on the London Stock Exchange in May  2010 and three placings in  April 2012, July 2018 and March 2020,” Ilika  notes on its website.
   The Solid State Battery Manifesto
    If you’re wondering why investors are willing to wait so long for the   payout, that’s a good question. One answer is Ilika’s roots in the   implantable device field, which are still, well, rooted. Last year the   leading Minnesota-based firm Cirtec Medical signed up for a 10-year   manufacturing license to produce Ilika’s milimeter-scale batteries at   its factory in Massachusetts.
   The other part of the answer can  be found in the case Ilika makes for  conventional lithium-ion batteries  to hand the torch over to solid  state battery innovators.
   In a  sort of manifesto on the company website, Ilika notes that the   performance of lithium-ion EV batteries was initially weighed against   existing rechargeable technology including lead-acid and nickel–metal   hydride batteries. That set a low bar to leap, but the safety issue is   not going away on its own.
   “Despite the many advantages of LIB  [lithium-ion batteries] being  clear (for example great cycle life and  rapidly decreasing costs) and  the technology being the battery type of  choice in current electric  vehicles, the technology is also stuck in  everyone’s subconscious in  terms of safety,” Ilika points out.
    Ilika notes that the stickiness of the safety issue is a little   unjustified due to the rarity of EV battery fires compared to gasoline   or diesel-sparked fires, which is certainly true. Still, the best-case   scenario for winning the hearts and minds of the driving public over to   new automotive technology would be no fires at all.
   The key  challenge for conventional lithium-ion technology is the  formation of  dendrites, which are fern-like structures that grow the  battery over  time, interfering with performance and leading to short  circuits.  Catastrophic failure is rare because EV battery innovators  have  developed ways to control dendrite formation. However, Ilika is  among  those anticipating that new solid state battery technology will do  away  with the issue altogether.
   Ilika does issue a caveat, noting  that there is not universal  agreement on the ability of a solid  electrolyte to stop dendrite  formation completely. However, the company  notes that “promising data  have been circulated to evidence that this  works.”
   “Based on our knowledge of solid state materials and  processes, Ilika  is now firmly progressing with the development of SSB  cells at Wh-level  for EV and consumer electronics applications,” Ilika  concludes.
   Next Steps For The Goliath EV Battery
    If you’re expecting a scaled-up version of the company’s Stereax line   of mm-scale medical and industrial batteries, guess again. The   company’s new EV-worthy solid state battery is a different formula and   involves different processes. Ilika describes the Goliath prototype as a     solid state pouch-type cell, sporting a nickel-manganese-cobalt cathode and a silicon anode.
    Hold on to your hats. While the prototype is an intermediate step   leading to commercialization, Ilika has already mapped out a detailed   manufacturing strategy as it carries on with the R&D phase. If  all   goes according to plan, the company anticipates having mass-producible   version ready to roll next year.
   Ilika plans to leverage  existing lithium-ion battery equipment and  systems to manufacture the  new battery. The next step is to deploy its  own pilot facility for  megawatt-scale production. Scaling up to the  gigawatt size will be a  matter of licensing to a manufacturer, so stay  tuned for more on that.
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