Solid state batteries for tomorrow's electric cars
The worldwide production of state-of-the-art lithium-ion battery cells is currently mainly controlled by Asian companies. If the European automotive industry with its 3.4 million employees was to switch from internal combustion engines to electric drive systems, it would be dependent on traction batteries from Asian manufacturers – if it did not succeed in bringing this key technology to Europe.
The upcoming technological leap towards solid state batteries offers a huge opportunity for this. Bat-tery cells of this kind do not require flammable liquid electrolytes and thus provide significantly im-proved operational reliability.
They also provide advantages in terms of size and weight, because less complex safety housing is required. In addition, the use of metallic anode material (lithium) instead of the graphite anodes commonly used today in solid-state batteries promises both higher energy density and significantly shorter charging times.
While the individual components (anode, cathode, electrolyte) of future solid state batteries have al-ready been well investigated in the laboratory, the greatest challenge is to integrate them into a stable integrated system.
It is important to achieve a long service life with high performance over as many charging and discharging cycles as possible, in order to outperform today's conventional battery sys-tems. The cooperation between Empa and the Fraunhofer ISC aims to remove the most important tech-nological barriers to the industrial production of solid-state battery cells.
Worldwide partnerships with the best
The project called IE4B (“Interface Engineering for Safe and Sustainable High-Performance Batteries”) started on January 1, 2019 and will run for three years as part of the Fraunhofer ICON (“International Cooperation and Networking”) funding line. With ICON, the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft aims to expand the strategic cooperation of its institutes with selected international centers of excellence in various fields. For example, projects with the University of Cambridge and Johns Hopkins University have been initiat-ed to date.
Empa's main focus in the recently launched IE4B project is the development of solid state electrolytes, the production and characterization of thin films with customized electronic properties, and the devel-opment of nanostructured anode materials.
The Fraunhofer ISC with its “Fraunhofer Research and De-velopment Center Electromobility Bavaria” works on lithium conducting polymers as well as on the de-velopment of protective layers of sol-gel materials with specific properties for batteries. In addition, it develops, manufactures and tests prototypes and small series of battery cells.
Industrial companies from Germany and Switzerland have also been involved in the IE4B project from the start as part of a steering group that accompanies the project from an industrial perspective: among others representatives of the chemical industry such as Heraeus (D), mechanical engineering such as the Bühler Group (CH) or Applied Materials (US/D), cell manufacturers such as Varta (D) and technology companies such as ABB (CH).
Reaching the goal in two stages
The aim of the project is to develop a solid-state battery that enables a stable charging and discharg-ing cycle at room temperature and can be charged quickly at the same time. The project is divided into two phases:
The first phase deals with basic aspects and uses battery model systems manufactured us-ing thin-film methods at Empa and ISC. In this first phase, the processes taking place at the interfaces between cathode, solid state electrolyte and anode are to be precisely understood and monitored.
In the second phase, this knowledge will be used to manufacture a functional solid-state cell with the process engineering expertise of the Fraunhofer ISC that will be produced in a small series. “Our com-mon goal is not only to have a better understanding of the interfaces, but also to be able to transfer this knowledge into a manufacturing process. The Fraunhofer and Empa know-how complement each other perfectly,” explains Henning Lorrmann, head of the Fraunhofer Research and Development Center for Electromobility in Bavaria (FZEB) at the Fraunhofer ISC.
The two-stage approach offers decisive advantages: As a model system in phase 1, the structure of the thin-film cells is easier to analyze. This allows the best matching electrode and electrolyte combinations to be identified. The more complex three-dimensional structure of larger battery cells in phase 2 is made much easier by the materials that have been matched beforehand.
Pierangelo Gröning, member of Empa’s board of directors, is one of the project coordinators. He em-phasizes the strategic importance: “The structure of the lithium-ion solid state battery is very complex and a major challenge for materials science. Through this cooperation, we are combining outstanding expertise in materials science and process engineering – and this is precisely what is required to suc-cessfully advance the development of the solid state battery.”
Editors / Media contact:
Rainer Klose
Empa, Communications
https://www.empa.ch/web/s604
phone +41 58 765 47 33
redaktion@empa.ch
Marie-Luise Righi
Fraunhofer Institute for Silicate Research ISC
https://www.isc.fraunhofer.de/en.html
Head of PR and Communications
phone +49 931 41 00-1 50
righi@isc.fraunhofer.de
Images
You can download highres-images here.
http://plus.empa.ch/images/2019-02-22-ICON-Fraunhofer-ISC/
Information:
Dr. Corsin Battaglia
Empa, Materials for Energy Conversion
https://www.empa.ch/web/s501
phone +41 58 765 41 31
econversion@empa.ch
Dr. Henning Lorrmann
Head Fraunhofer R&D Center for Electromobility Bavaria (FZEB)
https://www.fzeb.fraunhofer.de/
Fraunhofer Institute for Silicate Research ISC
https://www.isc.fraunhofer.de/en.html
phone +49 931 4100-519
lorrmann@isc.fraunhofer.de
https://www.isc.fraunhofer.de/en/press-and-media/press-releases/Solid_state_batt…
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