Technology
Amazingly simple discovery extends Li-ion battery lifespan by 50% — meaning you don't have to replace your gadgets as often
Replacing gadgets like smartphones or laptops just because the battery stops holding charge can be a real headache. But new research outlines a way to give common lithium-ion batteries a much longer lifespan — starting with their very first charge cycle.
Charging Li-ion batteries — which power most personal electronics and electric vehicles (EVs) — at high temperatures or currents before they hit the shelves could extend their average lifespans by 50%, researchers said in a new study published Aug. 29 in the journal Joule.
The results "demonstrate a generalizable approach for understanding and optimizing this crucial step in battery manufacturing," said study coauthor Steven Torrisi, a senior research scientist at the Toyota Research Institute in California, in a statement.
A typical Li-ion battery has a positive and a negative electrode in an electrolyte solution containing lithium ions. When you charge the battery, lithium ions move into the negative electrode. Then, when you use the battery and expend its charge, the lithium ions move out of the negative electrode and into the positive one. The back-and-forth flow of ions facilitates the electric current that powers a device.
Related: Charging future EVs could take seconds with new sodium-ion battery
A brand-new Li-ion battery is completely discharged — the positive electrode is full of lithium, and the negative electrode has plenty of space for lithium ions to flow into. But on the first charge, some of the lithium in the battery gets stuck on the surface of the negative electrode. The trapped lithium, along with other components of the electrolyte solution, becomes part of a layer called the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI). This SEI encases the negative electrode, protecting it from side reactions that cause further loss of lithium and so shorten the battery’s lifespan.
Usually, manufacturers first charge the battery slowly to build up a stable SEI. But that isn’t always the most cost-effective approach — and recent studies show that charging the battery quickly doesn’t necessarily have a negative impact on the battery’s life. What’s more, several other parameters can impact the SEI, so it’s not easy to optimize the first charge for the best battery performance.
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