Zhongwei Chen, a chemical engineering professor at Waterloo, and a team of graduate students have created a low-cost battery using silicon that boosts the performance and life of lithium-ion batteries. Their findings are published in the latest issue of Nature Communications .
Waterloo's silicon battery technology promises a 40 to 60 per cent increase in energy density, which is important for consumers with smartphones, smart homes and smart wearables.
The environmentally safe technology could also make dramatic improvements for hybrid and electric vehicles. The findings could mean an electric car may be driven up to 500 kilometres between charges and the smaller, lighter batteries may significantly reduce the overall weight of vehicles.
Current lithium-ion batteries normally use graphite anodes. The Waterloo engineers found that silicon anode materials have a much higher capacity for lithium and are capable of producing batteries with almost 10 times more energy.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by WalksOnDirt on Thursday October 29 2015, @06:07PM
Silicon in lithium ion batteries is old news, and the summary doesn't explain what they did at all. Panasonic's cells already use some silicon, but what they have done to increase cycle life appears to be secret. Chen is proposing to heat treat the silicon electrode to make them last 2000 cycles.
He expects batteries on the market in only one year, which I find unbelievable.