Home > Press > New materials to help stop lithium-ion battery fires, explosions and improve battery performance
Purdue University scientists have come up with patented techniques that may cut down the fire risk from lithium-ion batteries, which are found in everyday electronic devices. (Stock photo) |
Abstract:
From automobiles and planes to laptops and e-bikes, lithium-ion batteries have been blamed for causing fires in high-tech devices. Now, Purdue University scientists have come up with patented techniques that may cut down the risk from these popular batteries, which are found in everyday devices such as phones and tablets.
New materials to help stop lithium-ion battery fires, explosions and improve battery performance
West Lafayette, IN | Posted on October 2nd, 2019
The major problem that hinders the wider implementation of these batteries into more automobiles and other larger devices is the flammable and explosive nature of the liquid electrolyte materials used in their fabrication, said Ernesto E. Marinero, a professor of materials engineering and electrical and computer engineering in Purdues College of Engineering. These liquids are used in what constitutes the highway, the electrolyte, for shuttling reversibly lithium ions between the battery electrodes during charge and discharge cycles.
Marinero said the Purdue research team created solutions that address the flammability problem, along with the need for high plasticity in the material inside the battery that connects the anode and cathode electrodes.
Purdue scientists created a novel composite solid-state electrolyte material system comprising ceramic nanoparticles embedded in polymer matrixes.
These patented technologies are designed to provide a safer path within the battery and increase the ionic conductivity and performance, Marinero said. In addition, these composite materials potentially enable the use of pure lithium metal anodes, to increment the volumetric capacity density of existing batteries by a factor of about five.
Marinero said the Purdue innovations have applications beyond automobiles and personal electronic devices. The battery technology also can help improve the function and lifetime of medical devices such as pacemakers.
Andres Villa, a doctoral research assistant who works in Marineros laboratory, studied the effects of various materials on the ionic conductivity. He found that less than 10% per weight of ceramic nanoparticles in a polymer composite electrolyte are needed to surpass the ionic conductivity of thin films comprising only the ceramic material, thereby significantly cutting down production costs.
Marinero and his team worked with scientists at the Argonne National Laboratory and the Battery Innovation Center on their technologies.
The technologies developed by Marinero and his team have been patented through the Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization. The researchers are looking for partners to further test and commercialize their technology. For more information on licensing this Purdue innovation, contact D.H.R. Sarma at the Office of Technology Commercialization at
The work aligns with Purdue’s Giant Leaps celebration of the universitys global advancements in sustainability and health as part of Purdues 150th anniversary. Those are two of the four themes of the yearlong celebrations Ideas Festival, designed to showcase Purdue as an intellectual center solving real-world issues.
####
About Purdue University
About Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization
The Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization operates one of the most comprehensive technology transfer programs among leading research universities in the U.S. Services provided by this office support the economic development initiatives of Purdue University and benefit the university’s academic activities through commercializing, licensing and protecting Purdue intellectual property. The office is managed by the Purdue Research Foundation, which received the 2016 Innovation and Economic Prosperity Universities Award for Innovation from the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. The Purdue Research Foundation is a private, nonprofit foundation created to advance the mission of Purdue University. Visit the Office of Technology Commercialization for more information.
For more information, please click here
Contacts:
Writer: Chris Adam, 765-588-3341,
Source: Ernesto Marinero,
Copyright © Purdue University
If you have a comment, please Contact us.
Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
News and information
Product authentication at your fingertips: UC Riverside-led research brings rapid and reversible switching of plasmonic color to solids October 4th, 2019
Nanoparticles Inside Samples of Mucus to Measure COPD Development October 4th, 2019
Researchers synthesize ‘impossible’ superconductor October 3rd, 2019
Oxford Instruments Supplies HLJ Technology Co. Ltd., with Plasma Etch and Deposition Solutions for the fabrication of VCSELS on 6 inch wafers October 3rd, 2019
Possible Futures
Product authentication at your fingertips: UC Riverside-led research brings rapid and reversible switching of plasmonic color to solids October 4th, 2019
Nanoparticles Inside Samples of Mucus to Measure COPD Development October 4th, 2019
Researchers synthesize ‘impossible’ superconductor October 3rd, 2019
Researchers repurpose failed cancer drug into printable semiconductor October 3rd, 2019
Nanomedicine
Nanoparticles Inside Samples of Mucus to Measure COPD Development October 4th, 2019
Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals to Participate in Upcoming October 2019 Conferences October 1st, 2019
New design of bioactive peptide nanofibers keeping both temperature reversibility and stiffness control September 30th, 2019
Probes shed new light on Alzheimer’s cause: Rice University scientists synthesize fluorescent ruthenium tags to track toxic amyloids in lab September 27th, 2019
Discoveries
Product authentication at your fingertips: UC Riverside-led research brings rapid and reversible switching of plasmonic color to solids October 4th, 2019
Nanoparticles Inside Samples of Mucus to Measure COPD Development October 4th, 2019
Researchers synthesize ‘impossible’ superconductor October 3rd, 2019
Researchers repurpose failed cancer drug into printable semiconductor October 3rd, 2019
Announcements
Product authentication at your fingertips: UC Riverside-led research brings rapid and reversible switching of plasmonic color to solids October 4th, 2019
Nanoparticles Inside Samples of Mucus to Measure COPD Development October 4th, 2019
Researchers synthesize ‘impossible’ superconductor October 3rd, 2019
Oxford Instruments Supplies HLJ Technology Co. Ltd., with Plasma Etch and Deposition Solutions for the fabrication of VCSELS on 6 inch wafers October 3rd, 2019
Patents/IP/Tech Transfer/Licensing
MIT engineers develop ‘blackest black’ material to date: Made from carbon nanotubes, the new coating is 10 times darker than other very black materials September 13th, 2019
A first for cancer research: New approach to study tumors August 20th, 2019
Sheaths drive powerful new artificial muscles July 11th, 2019
Battery Technology/Capacitors/Generators/Piezoelectrics/Thermoelectrics/Energy storage
Borophene on silver grows freely into an atomic skin: Rice scientists lead effort to improve manufacture of valuable 2D material October 1st, 2019
‘Nanochains’ could increase battery capacity, cut charging time September 20th, 2019
The future of materials with graphene nanotubes starts in Japan September 19th, 2019