|   |   R&D                           World’s first anode-free sodium solid-state battery  
    Researchers at the University of Chicago San Diego have created a  new  sodium battery architecture with stable cycling for several hundred   cycles, which could serve as a future direction to enable low-cost,   high-energy-density and fast-charging batteries.                                                                                                              By                                                                                                         Marija Maisch                                                               				                      Jul 09, 2024 
    R&D   Sodium-ion batteries   Technologies                                                                                    	 		 		  			  						   		 					 									Anode-free schematics and energy density  calculations. a) Cell  schematic for carbon anodes, alloy anodes, and an  anode-free  configuration. b) Theoretical energy density comparison for  various  sodium anode materials. c) Schematic illustrating the  requirements for  enabling an anode-free all-solid-state battery.  |  Image: Laboratory for  Energy Storage and Conversion, UC San Diego						 	 			               In what is described as the world  first, researchers at the  University of Chicago San Diego have managed  to devise design principles  for enabling an anode-free all-solid-state  battery.
      “Although there have been previous sodium,  solid-state, and  anode-free batteries, no one has been able to  successfully combine these  three ideas until now,” said UC San Diego  PhD candidate Grayson  Deysher, the first author of a new paper  outlining the team’s work.
      To create a sodium battery, which  is said to boast an energy density  on par with lithium ion batteries,  the research team needed to invent a  new sodium battery architecture.
       It opted for an anode-free battery design, which removes the anode   and stores the ions on an electrochemical deposition of alkali metal   directly on the current collector. Eliminating the anode enables reduced   weight and volume, higher cell voltage, lower cell cost, and increased   energy density, but brings its own challenges.
      “In any  anode-free battery there needs to be good contact between the   electrolyte and the current collector,” Deysher said. “This is   typically very easy when using a liquid electrolyte, as the liquid can   flow everywhere and wet every surface. A solid electrolyte cannot do   this.”
      However, the liquid electrolytes create a buildup  called solid  electrolyte interphase while steadily consuming the active  materials,  reducing the battery’s lifetime.
      The UC San  Diego team took a novel approach to this problem. Rather  than using an  electrolyte that surrounds the current collector, they  created a  current collector that surrounds the electrolyte.
      They created their current collector out of aluminum powder, a solid that can flow like a liquid.
       “An aluminium current collector is found to achieve intimate   solid–solid contact with the solid electrolyte, which allows highly   reversible sodium plating and stripping at both high areal capacities   and current densities, previously unobtainable with conventional   aluminium foil,” the researchers reported.
      During battery  assembly, the powder was densified under high pressure  to form a solid  current collector while maintaining a liquid-like  contact with the  electrolyte, enabling the low-cost and high-efficiency  cycling. The  researchers reported that a sodium anode-free  all-solid-state battery  full cell has demonstrated stable cycling for  several hundred cycles.
       “Sodium solid-state batteries are usually seen as a   far-off-in-the-future technology, but we hope that this paper can   invigorate more push into the sodium area by demonstrating that it can   indeed work well, even better than the lithium version in some cases,”   Deysher said.
      The researchers have filed a patent application  for their work  through UC San Diego’s Office of Innovation and  Commercialization. Their  findings are further discussed in “Design  principles for enabling an  anode-free sodium all-solid-state battery,”  published in   Nature Energy.
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