4.8 Article

Fast-charging aluminium-chalcogen batteries resistant to dendritic shorting

Journal

NATURE
Volume 608, Issue 7924, Pages 704-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04983-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MIT Energy Initiative
  2. MIT Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation
  3. ENN Group
  4. Peking University startup funding
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22075002]
  6. National Postdoctoral Programme for Innovative Talents [BX2021002]
  7. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0715000]
  8. Office of the Executive Vice President for Research and Innovation at University of Louisville
  9. Office of Science of the US Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  10. US DOE [DE-AC02-06CH1135]

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We have developed a bidirectional, rapidly charging aluminium-chalcogen battery using a molten-salt electrolyte and a positive elemental-chalcogen electrode. This battery offers high charging rates, stability during cycling, low cost, recyclability, and fire resistance.
Although batteries fitted with a metal negative electrode are attractive for their higher energy density and lower complexity, the latter making them more easily recyclable, the threat of cell shorting by dendrites has stalled deployment of the technology(1,)(2). Here we disclose a bidirectional, rapidly charging aluminium-chalcogen battery operating with a molten-salt electrolyte composed of NaCl-KCl-AlCl3. Formulated with high levels of AlCl3, these chloroaluminate melts contain catenated AlnCl3n+1- species, for example, Al2Cl7-, Al(3)Cl(10)( )(-)and Al4Cl13-, which with their Al-Cl-Al linkages confer facile Al3+ desolvation kinetics resulting in high faradaic exchange currents, to form the foundation for high-rate charging of the battery. This chemistry is distinguished from other aluminium batteries in the choice of a positive elemental-chalcogen electrode as opposed to various low-capacity compound formulations(3)(-6), and in the choice of a molten-salt electrolyte as opposed to room-temperature ionic liquids that induce high polarization(7-)(12). We show that the multi-step conversion pathway between aluminium and chalcogen allows rapid charging at up to 200C, and the battery endures hundreds of cycles at very high charging rates without aluminium dendrite formation. Importantly for scalability, the cell-level cost of the aluminium-sulfur battery is projected to be less than one-sixth that of current lithium-ion technologies. Composed of earth-abundant elements that can be ethically sourced and operated at moderately elevated temperatures just above the boiling point of water,this chemistry has all the requisites of a low-cost, rechargeable, fire-resistant, recyclable battery.

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