First rechargeable sodium–carbon dioxide battery created

Date
05/14/2016

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Wiley

The sodium–carbon dioxide battery could power vehicles in Mars' CO2-rich atmosphere or recycle exhaust CO2 in a hybrid car

The first rechargeable sodium–carbon dioxide battery has been created with the help of a nanostructured cathode. The cheap and potentially powerful battery could fuel Mars vehicles as the red planet’s atmosphere is 96% carbon dioxide or recycle carbon dioxide emissions on Earth.

Sodium–carbon dioxide batteries can theoretically store 10 times as much energy weight for weight as commercial lithium–ion batteries. They work similarly to lithium–air batteries but use cheaper, more abundant sodium and carbon dioxide. Moreover, many electrolytes react with the compounds formed during discharge in a lithium–air battery – a problem that doesn’t occur in sodium–carbon dioxide batteries, which only produce sodium carbonate and carbon.

However, the few existing metal–carbon dioxide batteries are non-rechargeable. As they discharge, solid products deposit on the cathode and block the gas channels that allow carbon dioxide to interact with the electrolyte, meaning the electrochemical reaction can’t be reversed.

Jun Chen and his team at Nankai University in China overcame this flaw using an ether-based electrolyte and a carbon nanotube cathode. ‘We tried different kinds of carbon – active carbon, graphite – but carbon nanotubes performed best because they have a highly porous, three-dimensional structure,’ says Chen. This means the cathode stores the discharge solids without the gas channels becoming blocked.

With an energy density of about 1000Wh/kg, Chen’s battery already surpasses its commercial counterparts. ‘Lithium-ion batteries that are used in Tesla electric cars have only about 180Wh/kg,’ says Chen. And, he adds, even after 200 discharge–recharge cycles, they saw almost no drop in the battery’s capacity.

However, there are still challenges to overcome before a sodium–carbon dioxide battery will see the inside of an electric car. Chen admits that water is detrimental to the battery, it only works with pure carbon dioxide and their coin-sized setup is currently too small to power anything more than a tiny light emitting diode.

Read more from Royal Society of Chemistry

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