4.6 Article

Pressure-induced evolution in the durability of nickel-metal hydride batteries under high-current charge

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 22, Pages 14085-14091

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp05100h

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The study found that pressurizing an AAA battery with Ar or N-2 at pressures of up to 5 MPa can significantly enhance its durability, even under high-current conditions. The research proposes a different reaction mechanism to explain how pressure affects the durability improvement.
We found that an AAA-type battery (min. 750 mAh) pressurized with Ar or N-2 at pressures of up to 5 MPa exhibited a significant durability enhancement even under high-current conditions. As an example of a charge-discharge cycle test at 3 amperes, the residual ratio of capacity at atmospheric pressure decreased to approximately 90% of the standard capacity before 50 cycles. However, at a pressure of 3 MPa of N-2, the capacity remained at more than 90% until 180 cycles. With an increase in the pressure, the residual ratio of capacity was further improved. It has been considered that, at the positive electrode of the Ni-MH battery, the chemical reaction from nickel(ii) hydroxide (Ni(OH)(2)) crystals to nickel oxide hydroxide (NiOOH) crystals occurs during the charging process. However, X-ray diffraction (XRD) results in the present study do not support this solid-solid reaction between these two types of crystal. To address this contradiction, we propose a different reaction mechanism by introducing the concept of non-crystalline fine particles of compounds, which are undetected by XRD. This mechanism clearly explains how the pressure affects the durability improvement. Pressurized batteries, which are capable of fast charge-discharge operation under high-current conditions, can provide a new route for application fields of unconventional energy storage.

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