Close X
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 Sep, 2014 01:07 PM
    Researchers have improved a liquid battery system that could enable renewable energy resources to compete with conventional power plants.
     
    The battery uses two layers of molten metal, separated by a layer of molten salt that acts as the battery's electrolyte. Because each of the three materials have a different density, they naturally separate into layers, like oil floating on water.
     
    The original system, using magnesium for one of the battery's electrodes and antimony for the other required an operating temperature of 700 degrees celsius.
     
    But with the new formulation, with one electrode made of lithium and the other a mixture of lead and antimony, the battery can operate at temperatures of 450-500 degrees celsius.
     
    "When the new battery discharges, lithium atoms in the negative electrode give up an electron and travel through the electrolyte to the lead-antimony electrode. Charging pushes them back in the opposite direction, and the flow of current is enough to keep the metals liquefied," explained Donald Sadoway, an electrochemist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
     
    The new batteries did well in tests of durability, showing no sign of corrosion after 1,800 hours of operation and maintaining 94 percent of their capacity after 450 complete charge-discharge cycles.
     
    Sadoway estimates that these batteries would keep 85 percent of their charge capacity after a decade of daily cycling.
     
    "There is no battery out there that can offer that level of performance," he noted.
     
    Sadoway says that a large-scale molten-metal unit might cost around $500 per kilowatt-hour of electricity produced.
     
    "But liquid electrodes do not degrade and there are no moving parts, so the maintenance costs would be very low," Sadoway pointed out.
     
    The paper was published in the journal Nature.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing
    On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the moon....

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper
    In what could solve the commercial problems associated with clean-up of nuclear waste, researchers have successfully tested a material that can extract...

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate
    Plant's productivity, that is the amount of biomass it produces, depends more on its size and age than temperature and precipitation as traditionally thought, says a study....

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate

    App to expose cheating partners

    App to expose cheating partners
    Have a doubt that your husband is having an extramarital affair? Get this app and track every detail of his digital life....

    App to expose cheating partners

    No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'

    No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'
    For hikers, outdoor enthusiasts and families that love to travel, this device is a must as this turns your smartphone into a "walkie talkie" even if you have no phone coverage....

    No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'

    Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core

    Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core
    To unlock the mystery behind how the cores of 'super-Earths' or giant planets like Jupiter respond to intense atmospheric pressure, US researchers...

    Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core