A team led by Yuan Yang, assistant professor of materials science and engineering in the department of applied physics and mathematics at Columbia Engineering, has developed a prototype that addresses this challenge: a Li-on battery shaped like the human spine that allows remarkable flexibility, highenergy density, and stable voltage no matter how it is flexed or twisted. The study is published today inAdvanced Materials.
"Theenergydensity of our prototype is one of the highest reported so far," says Yang. "We've developed a simple and scalable approach to fabricate a flexible spine-likelithium ion batterythat has excellent electrochemical and mechanical properties. Our design is a very promising candidate as the first-generation, flexible, commercial lithium-ion battery. We are now optimizing the design and improving its performance."
Yang, whose group explores the composition and structure ofbattery materialsto realize high performance, was inspired by the suppleness of the spine while doing sit-ups in the gym. The human spine is highly flexible and distortable as well as mechanically robust, as it contains soft marrow components that interconnect hard vertebra parts. Yang used the spine model to design a battery with a similar structure. His prototype has a thick, rigid segment that stores energy by winding the electrodes ("vertebrae") around a thin, flexible part ("marrow") that connects the vertebra-like stacks of electrodes together. His design provides excellent flexibility for the whole battery.
Yang's team cut the conventional anode/separator/cathode /separator stacks into long strips with multiple "branches" extending out 90 degrees from the "backbone." Then they wrapped each branch around the backbone to form thick stacks for storing energy, like vertebrae in a spine. With this integrated design, the battery's energy density is limited only by the longitudinal percentage of vertebra-like stacks compared to the whole length of the device, which can easily reach over 90 percent.
The battery shows stable capacity upon cycling, as well as a stable voltage profile no matter how it is flexed or twisted. After cycling, the team disassembled the battery to examine the morphology change of electrode materials. They found that the positive electrode was intact with no obvious cracking or peeling from the aluminum foil, confirming the mechanical stability of their design. To further illustrate the flexibility of their design, the researchers continuously flexed or twisted the battery during discharge, finding that neither bending nor twisting interrupted the voltage curve. Even when the cell was continuously flexed and twisted during the whole discharge, the voltage profile remained. The battery in the flexed state was also cycled at higher current densities, and the capacity retention was quite high (84% at 3C, the charge in 1/3 of an hour). Thebatteryalso survived a continuous dynamic mechanical load test, rarely reported in earlier studies.
The study is titled "Bio-inspired, spine-like flexible rechargeablelithium-ion batterieswith high energydensity."
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More information:"Bio-inspired, spine-like flexible rechargeable lithium-ion batteries with high energy density"Advanced Materials(2018).DOI: 10.1002/adma.201704947, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.201704947/full
Provided byColumbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science