Analysis

A new era for solid-state batteries

8th December 2015
Nat Bowers
0

Oakridge Global Energy Solutions recently announced its plan to fully utilise the many patents developed & owned by the company on solid-state batteries. Oakridge Global Energy Solutions will complete the last phase of pre-production prototyping in early 2016 and will be ready for full commercial product and manufacturing in late 2016 to early 2017. Commercialisation of solid-state battery indicates a new era for the $135bn addressable battery market in a decade. IDTechEx Research forecast that the market for solid-state batteries will exceed $4bn in 2026.

By Dr Xiaoxi He, Technology Analyst, IDTechEx.

Advantages of solid-state batteries

A typical battery cell consists of cathode, anode, separator and electrolyte. One of the most successful commercial batteries is the lithium-ion technology, which has been commercialised since 1991. Most current lithium-ion technologies employ liquid electrolyte, with lithium salts such as LiPF6, LiBF4 or LiClO4 in an organic solvent (e.g. alkyl carbonates). However, the solid-electrolyte interface, which is caused as a result of the de-composition of the electrolyte at the negative electrode, limits the effective conductance. Furthermore, liquid electrolyte needs expensive membranes to separate the cathode and anode, as well as an impermeable casing to avoid leakage. Therefore, the size and design freedom for these batteries are limited. Furthermore, liquid electrolyte has safety and health issues as it uses flammable and corrosive liquids.

In solid-state lithium ion batteries, both the electrodes and the electrolyte are solid-state. Solid-state electrolyte normally behaves as the separator as well. It is safer, although all of the organic electrolytes used are flammable. Solid-state electrolytes allow scaling due to the elimination of certain components (e.g. separator and casing). Therefore, they can potentially be made with a higher energy density and power density. In addition, they are more resistant to changes in temperature and physical damages occurred during usage. Therefore they can handle more charge/discharge cycles before degradation, promising a longer life time.

Solid state batteries can be a game changer

Solid-state batteries can be a game-changer in electronics, robotics, electric vehicles, medical devices and military where better safety, longer cycle life and potentially higher energy density are required. Toyota has started to develop all-solid-state batteries since 2010. As the batteries used for electric vehicles usually require longer development time, positive results are not expected to be seen in less than 8 years. An easier entry is consumer electronics. The batteries going to be commercialised by Oakridge Global Energy Solutions are targeting IoT markets and those batteries are thin, tiny, easily to be used in small electronic gadgets.

Difficulty is the material selection

The key component of an all-solid-state battery is the solid-state electrolyte. Usually solid-state electrolytes have lower ionic conductivity. For instance, the 1st gen solid-state electrolyte, Lithium Phosphorus OxyNitride (LiPON), widely used in existing commercial solid-state thin film batteries, has a low ionic conductivity of 2x10-6S/cm at 25°C, still 3-4 orders of magnitude worse than liquid electrolyte (10-2 to 10-3S/cm). Lithium germanium phosphorous sulfide ceramics have been studied as a potential solid-state electrolyte as well. However, unstable and reactive features at large scale turned out to be a challenge. Besides fair ionic conductivity and stable performance, a good solid-solid interface between electrode and electrolyte is also important. So far, candidates include sulfide, oxide, nitride ceramics, glasses and polymers, although more materials are being studied and developed by scientists.

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