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Dresden-based KaSiLi to make better batteries for EVs in Germany

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In the umbrella concept “Research Fab Battery”, German scientists want to develop novel batteries that are capable of storing at least 70% more energy for electric vehicles and smartphones than conventional lithium-ion solutions while maintaining the same volume.

As part of the cluster of competence for battery materials “ExcellBattMat“ funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), Dresden’s “ExcellBattMat Center” (project KaSiLi: structural cathode adaptation for silicon and lithium materials) contributes key components for this new battery generation. On November 1, 2019, researchers from Fraunhofer, TU Dresden and Leibniz started working together on innovative battery electrodes consisting of ultra-thin silicon or lithium layers to achieve high energy densities.

Electric vehicles are to travel up to 700 kilometers with one battery charge, and smartphones to be charged much less frequently. Dresden-based “KaSiLi” under the auspices of the Fraunhofer Institute for Material and Beam Technology IWS, will carry out research into new electrode technologies for three years.

“This is a quantum leap for battery technology,” hopes Prof. Christoph Leyens, Head of Fraunhofer IWS and director of the Institute of Materials Science at Technische Universität Dresden. “This disruptive technology has the potential to significantly advance Germany as a business location,” adds chemistry professor Stefan Kaskel from TU Dresden, who also heads the “ExcellBattMat Center” (Centre of Excellence for Battery Materials, EBZ for short) at Fraunhofer IWS and the KaSiLi project sponsored by BMBF.

In the long value-added chain from the battery cell to the finished electric car, German economy could thus gain significantly in importance. “Ultimately, we want to establish a modern battery cell production facility in Germany. As a result, we would be less dependent than before on supplies from the Far East or the USA for the transition to electromobility and renewable energies,” Kaskel emphasised.

To achieve this, the researchers are developing new materials, design principles and processing technologies for the electrodes in the smallest energy storage units of an accumulator. Important components in such a cell are the anode and cathode. The electrical charge carriers move back and forth between these two poles when a battery is charged or when it is supplying electricity for the electric motor in an electric car. Today, the anode in a lithium-ion battery usually consists of a copper conductor a few micrometers (thousandths of a millimetre) thin, covered with a graphite layer about 100 micrometers thick.

The Dresden chemists want to replace this graphite layer with much thinner layers of silicon or lithium. These will then measure only about ten to 20 to 30 micrometers. In the lab, this already works quite well and already provides more energy storage capacity. “Today’s lithium-ion batteries have an energy density of around 240 watt hours per kilogram or up to 670 watt hours per liter,” explained Stefan Kaskel. With our electrodes, we want to achieve well over 1,000 watt hours per litre.

On the way, however, the developers not only have to further improve the chemistry and coating processes for their cells, but also solve a mechanical problem: Under the microscope it has been shown that the electrodes, which are thinly coated with silicon or lithium, shrink again and again and expand when the batteries are charged or discharged – as if the cell were breathing. However, this poses a problem because the mechanical stress can quickly destroy the electrodes through this “breathing”. For this reason, the partners are now experimenting with tiny springs. They are working on special layers for the cathode formulations.

“These are to be given cushioning properties through a special adaptation of their microscopic properties to contribute significantly to a higher energy density of the new battery generation,” said Dr. Kristian Nikolowski from the Fraunhofer Institute for Ceramic Technologies and Systems IKTS.

In order to cast all these technologies into prototypes and finally bring them to series maturity, the KaSiLi partners combine various research strengths that complement each other. Fraunhofer IWS contributes its experience in thin-film technology. The Fraunhofer IKTS deals with oxide cathode technology and its scaling. The nanoelectronics laboratory “NaMLab” at Technische Universität Dresden (TUD) uses special spectroscopy equipment to investigate the newly designed anodes.

The Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research (IFW) Dresden focuses on the structural analysis of electrode layers. The TUD Chairs for Inorganic Chemistry of Prof. Stefan Kaskel and for Inorganic Non-Metallic Materials of Prof. Alexander Michaelis are responsible for the preliminary research for new electrode structures.

In addition, these Dresden institutes are cooperating with the other three German ExcellBattMat centres in Münster, Munich and Ulm. The Dresden researchers act as a kind of high-tech hotbed for new materials within the Germany-wide umbrella concept “Battery Research Factory”, which unites numerous battery funding activities of the BMBF under one roof.

The KaSiLi partners intend to have functional demonstrators ready by 2022. The new battery design will then flow into a “research production battery cell” in Münster. All this ultimately aims to establish a large-scale production of battery cells in Germany. This should improve the competitiveness of electric cars “Made in Germany” and secure jobs there.


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