January 06, 2024
By Tina Casey
Harvard Spinoff Lobs Solid State
Battery Bomb At Fossil Fuels
New energy storage technology is driving fossil
fuels out of the global economy, and a Harvard University spinoff
called Adden Energy has just added more fuel to the fire. Their new
solid state battery can last for 6,000 cycles and take just 10 minutes
to recharge, which is about the same amount of time as filling up a
tank of gas. No word yet on cost, but the Adden is betting that the
battery’s long lifespan will help make electric vehicles more
affordable.
New Solid State Battery Gives Dendrites The Boot
New solid state energy storage technology is
the next big thing, replacing the liquid in a conventional lithium-ion
battery with a polymer, a high-tech ceramic or some other solid
material. Getting lithium
ions to move through a solid is a
challenging feat, but the payoff is longer range and faster charging
times.
Adden Energy is one among many
solid state battery innovators to overcome the ion movement hurdle,
and they have also come up with a vigorous solution to the problem of dendrite formation,
to boot. Dendrites are tiny fernlike growths that develop on the
anodes of lithium-ion batteries. They interfere
with battery performance and increase the
risk of fire.
Adden got its start at
Harvard’s John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
where a research group headed up by Associate Professor Xin Li has
been hammering away at the challenges and opportunities posed by solid
state EV batteries.
In 2018 the group racked up one
solid state battery breakthrough when it published a
study of sulfide solid electrolytes in the
journal Nature
Communications.
“The goal of our paper is to demonstrate that the
control and modification of the microstructures in LGPS and LSPS can
adjust and improve their voltage stabilities,” the group explained,
referring to two types of crystalline sulfide solid electrolytes.
“More importantly, we aim to reveal the
underlying mechanism between the microstructure and the performance of
sulfide solid electrolytes, which can serve as the guidelines for the
future materials and battery cell designs.”
How Does It Work?
They weren’t kidding around. The
new battery is the result of additional research, culminating in a new
study published on January 8 in the peer reviewed journal Nature
Materials under the title, “Fast cycling of lithium
metal in solid-state batteries by
constriction-susceptible anode materials.”
Dendrite growth was once thought to be a problem
only for liquid-electrolyte batteries, but it can bedevil a solid
state battery, too. Various workarounds have emerged to slow them
down, and the Li team went one step beyond, to stop them altogether.
You can get all the juicy details from the study,
or check out a highly readable explainer by Leah Burrows at the
Harvard press office.
“In this new research, Li and his
team stop
dendrites from forming by using micron-sized
silicon particles in the anode to constrict the lithiation reaction
and facilitate homogeneous plating of a thick layer of lithium metal,”
Burrows explains.
“These coated particles create a homogenous
surface across which the current density is evenly distributed,
preventing the growth of dendrites,” she adds. “And, because plating
and stripping can happen quickly on an even surface, the battery can
recharge in only about 10 minutes.”
“In our design, lithium metal gets wrapped around
the silicon particle, like a hard chocolate shell around a hazelnut
core in a chocolate truffle,” Li elaborated.
Hurry Up And Wait, Or Not
The new battery is still in the scaling-up stage.
The study involved a pouch cell the size of a postage stamp. Still,
that’s about 10 to 20 times bigger than a typical university lab-made
battery, and it was big enough to establish some data.
‘The battery retained 80% of its capacity after
6,000 cycles, outperforming other pouch cell batteries on the market
today,” Burrows noted.
In the meantime Adden, which was co-founded by Li
and three Harvard alumni, has already scaled the new solid state
battery up to the size of a smart phone.
Adden won the exclusive technology license from
Harvard University’s Office of Technology Development in 2022, and the
company also nailed down a seed round financing of $5.15 million.
“Primavera Capital Group led Adden Energy’s seed
round, with participation by Rhapsody Venture Partners and
MassVentures,” Adden explained in a press release.
“The license and the venture
funding will enable the startup to scale Harvard’s laboratory
prototype toward commercial deployment of a
solid-state lithium-metal battery that may
provide reliable and fast charging for future EVs to help bring them
into the mass market,’ the company added.
As for when that might happen,
back in 2022 Adden anticipated a palm-sized pouch cell as a first
step, and moving on to a full-sized solid state battery for electric
vehicles within the next three to five years. About one of those years
has already come and gone, but the timeline is consistent with other
new solid state batteries, which are generally expected to hit the
market sometime before 2030 or thereabouts (see more solid
state news here).
Circling back around to that thing about costs,
Li suggests that the long lifespan of a solid state battery can help
make EVs more affordable by improving their resale value.
“Electric vehicles cannot remain a luxury
fashion, literally the ‘one percent’ of vehicles on the road, if we
are to make progress toward a clean energy future, and the U.S. won’t
have a used-car market if EV batteries last only 3 to 5 years,” he
said. “The technology needs to be accessible to everyone. Extending
the lifetime of the batteries, as we’re doing here, is an important
part of that.”
Why Is Everybody Picking On Harvard?
Speaking of Harvard, the school has been much in
the public eye these days because it was among a trio of Ivy League
universities to be called to testify before Congress in December.
Without going into the details, let’s just say there’s more there than
meets the eye.
We’re bringing this up in the
context of clean technology because the hearing was called by
Republican leadership in the US House of Representatives, with prominent
Republican activists in the mix. They have
not been shy about expressing their determination to upend diversity,
equity and inclusion (DEI) programs at
institutions of learning, and the anti-DEI campaign is an element in a
well documented multi-state
effort to stop investor dollars from flowing
into clean tech. Preventing schools from teaching
climate science also factors into the
campaign.
With that in mind, it’s no accident that Harvard,
along with MIT and the University of Pennsylvania, were tapped to
provide fodder for the grist mill.
All three schools are front and center in climate
research and clean tech innovation, to boot. The new solid state
battery is a good example. Harvard’s Climate Change Solutions Fund
contributed to help launch Adden into business, following years of
support from the school for the foundational research.
MIT has also made numerous
contributions to the clean tech industry (see our coverage here).
The school also advocates for renewable energy through its Climate
Portal, and it has established the
MIT Energy Initiative to bring “the totality
of MIT’s capabilities to bear on climate change throughout the world
with novel technology and science-based guidance for policy makers.”
At the University of Pennsylvania,
the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy is also on a climate centered
mission. “We firmly believe that solutions to today’s most significant
challenges, like climate change, are grounded in a
reimagined energy system that can only be
realized on a strong foundation of advanced energy policy research,”
KCEP states.
The anti-DEI angle is not secret
knowledge, by the way. On January 5, ABC reporter Kiara Alfonseca took
a deep dive into the topic. Check it out here.
Follow me @tinamcasey on Bluesky, Threads, Post, and LinkedIn.
Image credit: New solid state battery resolves dendrite
issues,
courtesy of Adden Energy.
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
509 995 1879
Cell, Pacific Time Zone.
General office:
509-254
6854
4501 East Trent
Ave.
Spokane, WA 99212
|