Deccan Chronicle

IIT-Hyderabad develops new electrodes

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A team of researcher­s at the Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, has developed electrodes for producing rechargeab­le lithium ion batteries with high energy densities. Dr Surendra K. Martha and his team have developed new electrode (both cathode and anode) material with higher specific capacities than convention­ally used electrodes.

They have also developed two kinds of cathode material with better capacity than existing systems. In one, they synthesise­d mixtures of transition metal oxide and carbon-coated lithium manganese phosphate

DR SURENDRA K. Martha and his team have deveopled new electrode (both cathode and anode) material with higher specific capacities than convention­al electrodes.

to form ‘blends’ that showed excellent stability under repeated cycling and very little energy loss over cycle life.

Dr Martha and his team have used nanoengine­ering in which the material used to fabricate the cathode is a few nanometres in dimension. In comparison, a human hair is approximat­ely 80,000-100,000 nanometre in diameter. The capacity of these electrodes is around 225 mAhg1, higher than those of current cathode material. In a further developmen­t, the team has doped cathode material with fluorine and magnesium, to result in better capacities.

Dr Martha’s team, in collaborat­ion with Oak Ridge National Laboratory USA, developed a unique organic-binder-less; additive-free 3D electrode architectu­re made of silicon and carbon in nano-dimensions and have coated it on a current collector made of carbon fibre, instead of copper foil that is used in convention­al cells.

The advantage of this material is that there is enough space between silicon and the surroundin­g carbon coating, which allows for volume expansion and contractio­n without pulverisat­ion of the silicon. Reversible capacities over 2000 mAh g-1 at C/10 rate have been obtained for these electrodes. A provisiona­l Indian patent has been filed for this work.

Dr Martha’s new electrodes can result in betterperf­orming lithium batteries with higher energy density than is currently possible.

Indeed, the team has already shown that combining the cathode and anode materials developed by them in coin-type lithium ion cell results in energy densities greater than 500 WH kg-1. This is more than twice the energy density seen in commercial lithium ion cells.

"I am in the process of scaling up and designing pouch and prismatic batteries from this small product", says Dr. Martha.

This, in R&D parlance, is the first step in the path of commercial­isation of high energy batteries that could power future electric vehicles on the Indian road.

Dr Martha’s studies have been published in the Journal of The Electroche­mical Society, Journal of Power Sources, Ionics, Journal of Energy Storage and the American Chemical Society’s open access journal, ACSOmega.

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