Liquid salt: This image shows ionic liquids (the blue globules) in a beaker of mineral oil.
John Wilkes

Energy

Betting on a Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough

A government-funded start-up claims it can make ionic liquid energy storage feasible.

  • Thursday, November 5, 2009
  • By Tyler Hamilton

A spinoff from Arizona State University says it can develop a metal-air battery that dramatically outperforms the best lithium-ion batteries on the market, and now it has the funding it needs to prove it.

The U.S. Department of Energy last week awarded a $5.13-million research grant to Scottsdale, AZ-based Fluidic Energy toward development of a metal-air battery that relies on ionic liquids, instead of an aqueous solution, as its electrolyte.

The company aims to build a Metal-Air Ionic Liquid battery that has up to 11 times the energy density of the top lithium-ion technologies for less than one-third the cost. Cody Friesen, a professor of materials science at Arizona State and founder of Fluidic Energy, says the use of ionic liquids overcomes many of the problems that have held back metal-air batteries in the past. "I'm not claiming we have it yet, but if we do succeed, it really does change the way we think about storage," says Friesen, who was named one of Technology Review's top innovators under 35 in 2009.

Metal-air batteries, such as those that use a zincanode, typically rely on water-based electrolytes. Oxygen from ambient air is drawn in through a porous "air" electrode (-cathode) and produces hydroxyl ions on contact with the electrolyte. These ions reach the anode and begin to oxidize the zinc--a reaction that produces current through the release of electrons.

Advertisement

But like any aqueous solution, the water in the electrolyte can evaporate, causing the batteries to prematurely fail. Water also has a relatively low electrochemical window, meaning it will begin to decompose when the cell exceeds 1.23 volts. These were two problems researchers at the U.S. Air Force Academy began tackling about 25 years ago. In the early 1980s they experimented with ionic liquids--salts that are a liquid at room temperature, and which often can remain a liquid in sub-zero temperatures or above the boiling point of water.

"They're wonder fluids. They're remarkable," says John Wilkes, an ionic liquids expert who heads the academy's chemistry department. "If you look at these liquids in a bottle, they look like water, except they're viscous. They're not volatile, they don't evaporate, they're physically stable and they conduct electricity fairly well."

Friesen, whose Arizona State research team has spent the past few years experimenting with various ionic liquids, says a metal-air battery using an ionic liquid as its electrolyte not only functions significantly longer--because drying out is no longer a problem--but it also gets a big boost in energy density. "These liquids have electrochemical stability windows of up to five volts, so it allows you to go to much more energy-dense metals than zinc." He says his research team will target energy densities of at least 900 watt-hours per kilogram and up to 1,600 watt-hours per kilogram in the DOE-funded project.

The problem with ionic liquids is that they're still made in small quantities, making them expensive compared to many other solvents used to dissolve salts. "But some people are making ionic liquids now out of things that are already known and produced in high quantities, like detergents," says Wilkes.

Print

Related Articles

Dim Prospects for Energy R&D Funding

As Congress prepares to vote on a comprehensive spending bill, U.S. energy projects such as ARPA-E hang in the balance.

Record Efficiency for Lithium-Air Batteries

Development is a step toward making such batteries practical for electric vehicles.

Using Ice to Cool Down the Grid

Utilities are installing devices that make ice at night to replace air-conditioning during times of peak power demand.

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

jpm1u

14 Comments

  • 831 Days Ago
  • 11/05/2009

great news

It's fantastic to hear news like this.  This research team could change the world if they're successful.  I wish them success!

But let's hope two things DO NOT happen if they're successful:
1.  the government classifies the tech for 20 years, then decides it's ok for the public
2.  some wealthy entity buys the patent

Reply

Observer10

3 Comments

  • 831 Days Ago
  • 11/05/2009

Re: great news

What makes you think the government would classify such technology?

Reply

jpm1u

14 Comments

  • 830 Days Ago
  • 11/06/2009

Re: great news

Mobile power could give the military a huge advantage with remotely operated, unmanned equipment.  So if the tech comes to fruition and is outrageously successful, I would not put it past the military to seize it for their advantage.  I may be completely wrong, just speculating.

Reply

Siphon

152 Comments

  • 827 Days Ago
  • 11/09/2009

Re: great news

Maybe. Military funding and research, and subsequent application may sometimes help technologies get past the risky phase and spinoff to quickly conquer the commercial market.

The Internet being an obvious example. After all, we're using it right now quite happily!

Reply

DennisBuller

118 Comments

  • 831 Days Ago
  • 11/05/2009

The Future Now! Maybe not...

  Stories like this are the reason I only post technology that has a working prototype on my site.
  This may happen tomorrow... Or never.
-Dennis
www.PrometheusGoneWild.com

Reply

jefferee

22 Comments

  • 830 Days Ago
  • 11/06/2009

Re: The Future Now! Maybe not...

What advantage is having a prototype if the material used to make it is prohibitively expensive?

Reply

bennash

1 Comment

  • 830 Days Ago
  • 11/06/2009

optimism and a solution

Hey guys, let's hope for the best. No need to speculate on a negative outcome (pun intended)

Anyway the article sums up that they've spent four years in development to reach a viable combo and now they're moving on to optimization.

When I read the part about preventing dendrite formation, I kept thinking of this other great new tech that prevents bacteria from sticking to a surface via a shark-skin like printed surface. I wonder if a similar textured surface on the electrode scaffold would help prevent dendrites. I WANT CREDIT IF THIS WORKS :)

The shark-skin tech article: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2009-10/saving-skin

Reply

Advertisement

Bumeadi

2 Comments

  • 829 Days Ago
  • 11/07/2009

About Time

Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough would be great idea; I can,t wait

B. Umeadi

Reply

  • 829 Days Ago
  • 11/07/2009

Question the Problem?

Using ionic liquids to help solve the problem of the drying out of acqueous electrolytes in a metal air battery bring up the question of.. do we need to?  Why can't the electrolytes be replenished?  This is just de-ionized water we're talking about.  I think Metal-Air batteries hold maybe the best promise of all for <$100K/MWh/high cycle energy storage, and this is the most exciting time to be in batteries since Edison, but we ought to think everytime we solve a problem whether the solution is more costly than the problem.

Reply

jwgorman

15 Comments

  • 817 Days Ago
  • 11/19/2009

Re: Question the Problem?

I think it's all about costs - if there was a battery that lasted for 10 years, could fully cycle with heavy DOD, and was cheap as chips we would have much more reason to adopt renewable energy sources, which is inherently sporadic but reliable over the average. if a new technology like this can get us there, great! if anyone in interested in building the framework for renewable energy management: http://www.solarnetwork.net/

Reply

Mekhong Kurt

13 Comments

  • 780 Days Ago
  • 12/26/2009

Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough

Great news! Hope this comes to fruition and makes it to market!

Reply

mkogrady

425 Comments

  • 636 Days Ago
  • 05/19/2010

Ionic Fluid Flow-cells

Do these fluids have a limitation on how large the cells can be made? If there is a way to scale up the battery size to the point they can be made economically, and applied to store off-peak and renewable energy so it can be fed back into the grid during the peak hours, then this is fantastic news - especially if the source of fluids can be made domestically or at least from sources of materials we have readily available here in the US.

Reply

ianhoag

1 Comment

  • 408 Days Ago
  • 01/02/2011

Re: Ionic Fluid Flow-cells

If this technology ends up costing "little more than lead acid batteries," then why not use lead acid batteries or some other cheaper, safer medium for storage of grid energy to be used for load balancing?  I believe the benefit from this technology comes from storing energy on mobile platforms, where a high energy density storage medium is in high demand.  If it's cheaper and more convenient than pumping gas into your car, then everyone will want it, and it can be recharged using solar panels while the car bakes in the sun while parked outside...

Reply

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Videos

Printing Parts

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

Synthetic Genomics

Lyric Semiconductor

Toyota

Cotendo

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement