News Release

Fast and durable batteries to come: A promising anode material for lithium-ion batteries

The proposed stable anode material, made with a bio-based polymers, could unlock extremely fast battery charging for electric vehicles

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

Figure 1. A bio-based anode material for ultrafast battery charging

image: Poly (benzimidazole), the precursor for the proposed anodematerial, can be derived from biological processes and processed easily to create fast-charging lithium-ion batteries. Their adoption in electric vehicles will make them more attractive to consumers over conventional cars, leading to a cleaner environments and reduced CO2 emissions. view more 

Credit: Noriyoshi Matsumi from JAIST.

Ishikawa, Japan - With the climate change concerns, an ever-increasing number of researchers are currently focusing on improving electric vehicles (EVs) to make them a more attractive alternative to conventional gas cars. The battery improvement of EVs is a key issue to attract more drives. In addition to safety, autonomy, and durability, most people want quickness in charging.  Currently, it takes 40-minute with state-of-the-art EVs while gas cars can be ‘recharged’ in no longer than five minutes. The charging time needs to be below 15 minutes to be a viable option.

Unsurprisingly, lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), which are used everywhere with portable electronic devices, have been recognized as an option in the field of EVs, and new strategies are always being sought to improve their performance. One way to shorten the charging time of LIBs is to increase the diffusion rate of lithium ions, which in turn can be done by increasing the interlayer distance in the carbon-based materials used in the battery’s anode. While this has been achieved with some success by introducing nitrogen impurities (technically referred to as ‘nitrogen doping’), there is no method easily available to control interlayer distance or to concentrate the doping element.

Against this backdrop, a team of scientists from Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) recently developed an approach for anode fabrication that could lead to extremely fast-charging of LIBs. The team, led by Prof. Noriyoshi Matsumi, consists of Prof. Tatsuo Kaneko, Senior Lecturer Rajashekar Badam, JAIST Technical Specialist Koichi Higashimine, JAIST Research Fellow Yueying Peng, and JAIST student Kottisa Sumala Patnaik, and their findings were published online on 24 Nov 2021 in Chemical Communications.

Their strategy constitutes a relatively simple, environmentally sound, and highly efficient way to produce a carbon-based anode with very high nitrogen content. The precursor material for the anode is poly (benzimidazole), a bio-based polymer that can be synthesized from raw materials of biological origin. By calcinating this thermally stable material at 800 °C, the team managed to prepare a carbon anode with a record-setting nitrogen content of 17% in weight. They verified the successful synthesis of this material, and studied its composition and structural properties using a variety of techniques, including scanning electron tunneling microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.

To test the performance of their anode and compare it with the more common graphite, the researchers built half-cells and full-cells, and conducted charge–discharge experiments. The results were very promising, as the proposed anode material proved suitable for fast charging, thanks to its enhanced lithium-ion kinetics. Moreover, durability tests showed that the batteries with the proposed anode material retained about 90% of its initial capacity even after 3,000 charge-discharge cycles at high rates, which is considerably more than the capacity retained by graphite-based cells.

Excited about the results, Professor Matsumi comments, “The extremely fast charging rate with the anode material we prepared could make it suitable for use in EVs. Much shorter charging times will hopefully attract consumers to choose EVs rather than gasoline-based vehicles, ultimately leading to cleaner environments in every major city across the world.

Another notable advantage of the proposed anode material is the use of a bio-based polymer in its synthesis. As a low-carbon technology, the material naturally leads to a synergistic effect that reduces CO2 emissions further. Additionally, as Professor Matsumi remarks, “The use of our approach will advance the study of structure–property relationships in anode materials with rapid charge–discharge capabilities.”

Modifications to the structure of the polymer precursor could lead to even better performance, which might be relevant for the batteries not only of EVs, but also of portable electronics. Finally, the development of highly durable batteries will decrease the global consumption of rare metals, which are non-renewable resources.

Let us all hope future progress in this field will pave the way to the widespread adoption of electric cars and other ecofriendly technologies.

 

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Reference

Title of original paper:  

Extremely Fast Charging Lithium-ion Battery Using Bio-Based Polymer-Derived Heavily Nitrogen Doped Carbon

Journal:

Chemical Communications

DOI:

10.1039/D1CC04931C

 

About Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan

Founded in 1990 in Ishikawa prefecture, the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) was the first independent national graduate school in Japan. Now, after 30 years of steady progress, JAIST has become one of Japan’s top-ranking universities. JAIST counts with multiple satellite campuses and strives to foster capable leaders with a state-of-the-art education system where diversity is key; about 40% of its alumni are international students. The university has a unique style of graduate education based on a carefully designed coursework-oriented curriculum to ensure that its students have a solid foundation on which to carry out cutting-edge research. JAIST also works closely both with local and overseas communities by promoting industry–academia collaborative research.  

 

 

About Professor Noriyoshi Matsumi from Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan

Professor Noriyoshi Matsumi obtained Master's and PhD degrees from Kyoto University, Japan, in 1997 and 2000, respectively. He joined JAIST in 2010, where he currently leads the Matsumi Lab at the School of Materials Science. He specializes in lithium-ion secondary batteries, metal-air batteries, electrocatalysis, solid polymer electrolytes, ionic liquids, and organoboron compounds, as well as solar cells and photoconductive materials. He has published over a hundred papers, authored 19 books, and received multiple awards from the Society of Polymer Science, Japan, and the Chemical Society of Japan.

 

Funding information:

This work was supported by Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program (SIP), “Technologies for Smart Bio-industry and Agriculture”(funding agency: Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution)


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