Great news but that story broke back in January.
I imagine we are years away from being able to purchase them but this is a game 
changer for sure.

      From: len moskowitz via EV <ev@lists.evdl.org>
 To: EVDL <ev@lists.evdl.org> 
 Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2017 9:35 AM
 Subject: [EVDL] Design News: Lithium-Ion Battery Inventor Ups Ante With 
Advanced Solid-State Rechargeable
   
https://www.designnews.com/electronics-test/lithium-ion-battery-inventor-ups-ante-advanced-solid-state-rechargeable/8222876656822

-----

Lithium-Ion Battery Inventor Ups Ante With Advanced Solid-State 
Rechargeable

The engineer who co-invented the lithium-ion battery has led a team of 
researchers that’s developed a solid-state battery cell that could be 
the answer to providing safe, fast-charging, and long-lasting 
rechargeable energy storage for a range of devices,

By: Elizabeth Montalbano
May 23, 2017

The engineer who co-invented the lithium-ion battery is set to 
revolutionize the field again. 94-year-old John Goodenough—professor in 
the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at 
Austin--has led a team of researchers that’s developed a solid-state 
battery cell that could be the answer to providing safe, fast-charging, 
and long-lasting rechargeable energy storage for a range of devices, 
including electric vehicles (EVs).

Goodenough, along with Cockrell School senior research fellow Maria 
Helena Braga and researcher Andrew Murchison, have developed a 
noncombustible battery that has a long cycle life, high volumetric 
energy density, and fast rates of charge and discharge. The engineers 
describe their new technology in a recent paper published in the journal 
Energy & Environmental Science .

Murchison said it was Braga that was chiefly behind the new design, 
which has at least three times as much energy density as today’s 
lithium-ion batteries. Energy density is what gives batteries its 
lifecycle between charges, so a battery with a very high energy density 
will, for example, allow an electric car to drive further between 
charges.

  [Photo] John Goodenough
[Caption] 94-year-old John Goodenough (left), professor in the Cockrell 
School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, has led a 
team of researchers that’s developed a solid-state battery cell that 
could be the answer to providing safe, fast-charging, and long-lasting 
rechargeable energy storage for a range of devices, including electric 
vehicles. Cockrell School senior research fellow Maria Helena Braga 
(center) and researcher Andrew Murchison (right) were pivotal members of 
the team. (Source: The University of Texas at Austin)

  The battery also allows for a greater number of charging and 
discharging cycles, which equates to longer-lasting batteries, as well 
as a faster rate of recharge that’s clocked in minutes rather than 
hours.
“Helena Braga is the really force behind all of this this,” he said, 
while Goodenough served as editor and writer of data, and Murchison 
himself the experimentalist.

Researchers used an alkali-metal anode—comprised of lithium, sodium or 
potassium--which increases the energy density of a cathode and delivers 
a long cycle life. In experiments, the researchers’ cells demonstrated 
more than 1,200 cycles with low cell resistance, they said.

The team chose a solid-state battery cell rather than a liquid one 
firstly because they are safer and don’t have the explosive potential 
that lithium-ion batteries have, Murchison said. Additionally, “lithium- 
and sodium-metal-based solid-state battery cells inherently have greater 
concentrations of active materials and therefore higher volumetric 
energy densities,” he said.

Today’s lithium-ion batteries use liquid electrolytes to transport the 
lithium ions between the anode and the cathode. If a battery cell is 
charged too quickly, it can cause what are called dendrites--or whiskers 
of metal--to form and cross through the liquid electrolytes, causing a 
short circuit that can lead to explosions and fires.

In the researchers’ design, the lithium-ion metal is plated on the 
cathode during discharge, which is different in a typical lithium-ion 
battery, in which the lithium is inserted in the cathode interstitial 
sites, Murchison said.

The battery design also differs from conventional batteries in other 
ways, he said. “Reversely to
lithium-ion batteries, the capacity of these cells will not depend on 
the cathode’s capacity but on the anodes--which is much greater,” 
Murchison said. “The solid-state glass electrolyte enables us to made a 
safer battery cell. Due to homogenous plating, no dendrites will be 
formed.”

The battery also can be used in higher temperatures—up to 200 degrees 
Celsius—which makes it well suited to providing the power source for 
EVs, he said.

“Today’s lithium batteries do not like heat,” he said. For example, 
early versions of the Nissan Leaf would not start in the mid-day heat of 
Phoenix in the summer because the battery was too hot after the car was 
turned off for several hours, Murchison said. A solution to that is that 
“air conditioning can be added to the battery pack, but this is 
expensive and heavy,” he added.

The new battery also is a “perfect fit” for compact, low-cost energy 
storage for devices like sensors, micro security cameras, displays, and 
other portable devices, as well as wearables, Murchison said.

The team will continue their work to acquire several patents for the 
technology as well as work with key industry partners to accelerate the 
deployment of the technology, Murchison said. “We are also exploring the 
further optimization of our anode, cathode and electrolyte materials,” 
he said.
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