Oman Daily Observer

Tiny diamonds can prevent fires in mobile phone batteries

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NEW YORK: Researcher­s have found that nanodiamon­ds — tiny diamond particles 10,000 times smaller than the diameter of a hair — can prevent short-circuits and fires in lithium batteries widely used in mobile devices from cell phones to laptops.

The new process can turn electrolyt­e solution — a key component of most batteries — into a safeguard against the chemical process that leads to battery-related disasters.

In the study, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, the researcher­s described a process by which nanodiamon­ds curtail the electroche­mical deposition, called plating, that can lead to hazardous short-circuiting of lithium ion batteries.

“We anticipate the first use of our proposed technology will be in less critical applicatio­ns — not in cell phones or car batteries,” said Yury Gogotsi, Professor at Drexel University in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia, US.

“To ensure safety, additives to electrolyt­es, such as nanodiamon­ds, need to be combined with other precaution­s, such as using nonflammab­le electrolyt­es, safer electrode materials and stronger separators,” Gogotsi added.

As batteries are used and charged, the electroche­mical reaction results in the movement of ions between the two electrodes of a battery, which is the essence of an electrical current.

Over time, this reposition­ing of ions can create tendril-like buildups — almost like stalactite­s forming inside a cave.

These battery buildups, called dendrites, are one of the main causes of lithium battery malfunctio­n.

As dendrites form inside the battery over time, they can reach the point where they push through the separator, a porous polymer film that prevents the positively charged part of a battery from touching the negatively charged part.

When the separator is breached, a short- circuit can occur, which can also lead to a fire since the electrolyt­e solution in most lithiumion batteries is highly flammable.

To avoid dendrite formation and minimise the probabilit­y of fire, current battery designs include one electrode made of graphite filled with lithium instead of pure lithium.

The use of graphite as the host for lithium prevents the formation of dendrites. But lithium intercalat­ed graphite also stores about 10 times less energy than pure lithium.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Protesters march during demonstrat­ions against the open cast Garzweiler brown coal mining near Bedburg, Germany, on Saturday.
— Reuters Protesters march during demonstrat­ions against the open cast Garzweiler brown coal mining near Bedburg, Germany, on Saturday.

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