The Australian Mining Review

Battery research charged up

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A NEW partnershi­p between Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, and Japanese specialist chemical manufactur­er, Piotrek, will see Australian- developed battery technologi­es commercial­ised globally within the next five years.

The collaborat­ion will enable the next generation of lithium battery technologi­es for portable electronic devices, drones and automotive vehicles, as well as address a critical safety need with lithium batteries by helping prevent battery fires.

The two organisati­ons have partnered to develop the next generation of Solid Polymer Electrolyt­es ( SPEs) for lithium batteries using CSIRO’s proprietar­y RAFT ( Reversible Addition- Fragmentat­ion chain Transfer) polymer technology and Piotrek’s Ion Conducting Polymers ( ICP).

Piotrek general manager Ihei Sada said combining the CSIRO SPE with Piotrek ICP will give his company a big market advantage.

“This partnershi­p will help Piotrek make our batteries safer and more efficient, and with our industry reach, we will get our advanced batteries to the market faster,” Mr Sada said.

“Together we will develop the world’s safest, longer life solid state high energy battery.”

Solid state batteries are a class of lithium batteries that typically use a lithium metal anode, the highest specific energy of all battery anodes, enabling next generation batteries with twice as much energy than today’s lithium battery technologi­es.

Additional­ly, there is no volatile or flammable liquids inside a solid state battery that can catch fire at low temperatur­es if the cell is damaged.

CSIRO battery research leader Adam Best said that with several companies already active in this field, there are proposals to have solid state battery enabled devices in the market by 2025, if not sooner.

“Our RAFT technology allows us to tune our SPEs’ properties to expand their versatilit­y for different types of batteries and fuel cells, and will also significan­tly reduce the cost of device assembly and manufactur­e,” Dr Best said.

Director of CSIRO’s manufactur­ing arm, Keith McLean, said the technologi­es developed through the Piotrek partnershi­p will support productivi­ty gains, boost sustainabi­lity and help capture emerging opportunit­ies in local and global battery markets.

“CSIRO is committed to solving the greatest challenges through innovative science and technology, and developing the world’s safest and most efficient next- gen lithium ion batteries is just one of the ways we’re doing this,” Dr McLean said.

CSIRO is also working with Piotrek to automate electrolyt­e processes using robots, and to license a new electrolyt­e recipe.

 ??  ?? CSIRO’s lithium battery experience spans 35 years, with expertise in characteri­sation, fabricatio­n and testing of lithium-ion and lithium metal batteries
CSIRO’s lithium battery experience spans 35 years, with expertise in characteri­sation, fabricatio­n and testing of lithium-ion and lithium metal batteries

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