Battery with aluminum-containing cathode
10686224 ยท 2020-06-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A battery includes an anode chamber configured to contain an anolyte and including an anode, a cathode chamber configured to contain a catholyte including a cathode, and a separator between the anode chamber and the cathode chamber. The anode includes sodium, and the cathode includes aluminum. The battery is configured to be operated above a melting point of the anolyte and the catholyte, such that the anolyte is a molten anolyte and the catholyte is a molten catholyte.
Claims
1. A battery comprising: an anode chamber comprising an anode, wherein the anode comprises sodium; a cathode chamber comprising a cathode, wherein the cathode comprises aluminum; and a separator between the anode chamber and the cathode chamber, wherein: the anode chamber contains an anolyte, the cathode chamber contains a catholyte, wherein the catholyte comprises a 4:1 molar ratio of NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (EMIAlCl.sub.4), and the battery is configured to be operated above a melting point of the anolyte and the catholyte, such that the anolyte is a molten anolyte and the catholyte is a molten catholyte.
2. The battery of claim 1, wherein the anolyte comprises sodium.
3. The battery of claim 1, wherein the separator comprises a solid sodium super ion conductor.
4. The battery of claim 3, wherein the solid sodium ion conductor comprises a porous coating of an electronically conductive metal oxide proximate the anode chamber.
5. The battery of claim 4, wherein the electronically conductive metal oxide comprises indium tin oxide.
6. The battery of claim 1, wherein the cathode chamber comprises aluminum wool in direct contact with the separator, and the catholyte is in direct contact with the aluminum wool and the separator.
7. The battery of claim 1, wherein charging the battery results in the formation of sodium.
8. The battery of claim 1, wherein discharging the battery results in the formation of aluminum.
9. The battery of claim 1, wherein the anode comprises molten sodium.
10. The battery of claim 1, wherein the cathode comprises molten NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7.
11. A battery comprising: an anode chamber comprising an anode, wherein the anode comprises sodium; a cathode chamber comprising a cathode, wherein the cathode comprises aluminum; and a separator between the anode chamber and the cathode chamber, wherein: the anode chamber contains an anolyte, the cathode chamber contains a catholyte, wherein the catholyte comprises a 4:1 molar ratio of Na.sub.2Al.sub.2Cl.sub.7 and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (EMIAlCl.sub.4), the cathode chamber comprises aluminum wool in direct contact with the separator, and the catholyte is in direct contact with the aluminum wool and the separator, and the battery is configured to be operated above a melting point of the anolyte and the catholyte, such that the anolyte is a molten anolyte and the catholyte is a molten catholyte.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7)
(8) Non-aqueous media such as ionic liquids and molten salts can be free of oxygen, such that cathode 106 in battery 100 does not form a surface oxide film during operation. Aluminum has relatively low electropositivity compared to alkali metal anodes. For an aluminum-containing material to be suitable as a cathode, it should be capable of supporting reversible plating and stripping of aluminum metal, and a compatible electrolyte is needed to support alkali ion migration to and from anode chamber 102 to maintain charge balance. NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 (mole ratio of AlCl.sub.3:NaCl=2:1), a combination of AlCl.sub.3 and NaCl, may be used as catholyte 108. In one example, catholyte 108 is NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 and anolyte 112 is molten sodium. At least one of NaAlCl.sub.4 and NaCl may be present in catholyte as solids 116 and 118, respectively. In the charged state, both the catholyte and the anolyte are liquid. During the discharge, the liquid volume of anolyte 112 and catholyte 108 decreases, as solid NaCl and Al metal are produced. In the recharge process, solid NaCl and Al metal return to the molten sodium and molten NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 respectively. Battery 100 may be recharged with fresh catholyte 108 and fresh anolyte 112 via inlet and outlet valves 120, 122 and 124, 126, respectively.
(9) The voltage output of a NaAl battery such as that depicted in
(10) According to the NaClAlCl.sub.3 phase diagram depicted in
(11) Battery 100 is typically assembled in a charged state, thus the first stage of a cycle is a discharge. NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 will transform to NaAlCl.sub.4 first (point a to point b in
(12) ##STR00001##
after which the composition on the phase diagram is NaCl:AlCl.sub.3=4:1 or 20 mol % AlCl.sub.3. NaAlCl.sub.4 then becomes the catholyte, which can continue the discharge as shown in equation (2).
(13) ##STR00002##
Therefore, the total cell reaction is:
(14) ##STR00003##
(15) The theoretical capacity of the NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 catholyte can be expressed as the number of coulombs generated per gram (g) of active material C=nF/M (M the molecular weight in g), but is more commonly reported as the time needed to pass this charge as a current (1 amp=1 coulomb/second) in units, such as hours of time at mA current, so that:
C=nF/M coulombs g.sup.1=nF/M Ampsec g.sup.1=nF/M1000/3600 mAhg.sup.1(4)
Substitution of n=6, F=96,500, and M=325.5 g, yields C=494 mAhg.sup.1.
(16) It may be preferable that the aluminum in the NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 catholyte not be fully deposited, such that liquid NaAlCl.sub.4 is present to serve as the electrolyte for Na.sup.+ flux in the subsequent re-charge process. That is, according to the phase diagram in
(17)
(18) A NaAl battery was constructed as depicted in
(19) Working at 200 C., discharge and charge behaviors at 0.1 C were recorded and are shown in
(20) In some implementations, a low-melting component such as the ionic liquid EMIAlCl.sub.4 is added to the electrolyte to increase the liquid volume and improve wetting. EMIAlCl.sub.4 is inactive in the charge/discharge process and the aluminum in it generally cannot be deposited. It is in the liquid state, but causes the conductivity of the NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7-EMIAlCl.sub.4 (mole ratio 4:1) mixture to become lower than for pure NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 due at least in part to an alkali cation trapping phenomenon, as shown in
(21) An improved charge/discharge profile with this catholyte is shown in
(22) In some implementations, the discharge is limited to a shallow value such that the cell process can be described by the equation
(23) ##STR00004##
in which no solid NaCl is generated.
(24) Some implementations include, in the cathode chamber, a supply of an adduct of AlCl.sub.3 with some appropriate (molecular) base chosen to maintain the activity of AlCl.sub.3 at about the same value as that in liquid NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7. This effectively buffers the electrolyte against NaCl precipitation and removes the volume change in the electrolyte from cell design consideration. The cell design can be modified to use a minimum electrolyte volume, and the capacity can be determined by the amount of AlCl.sub.3 in the adduct. The AlCl.sub.3 adduct, unlike NaCl, would be a soft solid that would readily release AlCl.sub.3 to the electrolyte to maintain an optimum activity for Al deposition. To minimize the effect on the capacity, the base may have a low molecular weight, and may be inorganic. The cell reaction may reduce to the transfer of AlCl.sub.3 to the electrolyte as NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 to accommodate the in-migration of Na.sup.+, effectively making the cell reaction
3Na+AlCl.sub.3=Al+3NaCl(6)
coupled with the acid-base process using AlCl.sub.3 from the bank, viz.,
3NaCl+6AlCl.sub.3=3NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7(7)
to maintain the liquid state of the electrolyte at 110 C., and give an overall cell reaction
3Na+7AlCl.sub.3=Al+3NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7(8)
Alternatively, it could be
3Na+4AlCl.sub.3=Al+3NaAlCl.sub.4(9)
if a higher operating temperature (T>158 C.) is used.
(25) The mass of AlCl.sub.3 needed to keep the NaCl in the low temperature (chloroaluminate) liquid state at constant AlCl.sub.3 activity is included in the cell capacity calculation. Using an AlCl.sub.3 storage bank can simplify the cell design because the volume change (formerly entirely residing in the electrolyte) is shared with the volume change in the AlCl.sub.3 bank.
(26) Table 1 provides a comparison with the lithium-ion battery and NaNiCl.sub.2 (ZEBRA) battery. The theoretical energy density can be obtained as the product of cell capacity in Coulombs per gram of active material from the cell equation and cell voltage, E=QV/M=nF/MV, where the units will be Jg.sup.1, but is usually expressed in units of Whkg.sup.1, and obtained from the product of cell voltage and capacity, the latter expressed in the practical units of mAhg.sup.1. Thus the theoretical energy density, assuming the cell voltage remains steady at the observed value of 1.6 V until all Al is consumed, would be 494 mAhg.sup.11.60 V (the average of charge and discharge voltages) or 790 Whkg.sup.1. However, as seen in
(27) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Comparisons among three kinds of batteries. Li-ion battery NaNiCl.sub.2 battery NaAl battery Cathode LiFePO.sub.4 NiCl.sub.2 NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 (capacity) (170 mAhg.sup.1) (414 mAhg.sup.1) (296 C < 494 mAhg.sup.1) Anode graphite sodium sodium (capacity) (372 mAhg.sup.1) (1165 mAhg.sup.1) (1165 mAhg.sup.1) Electrolyte LiFP.sub.6 in NaAlCl.sub.4 NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 and organic solvent NaAlCl.sub.4 Separator polymer Na.sup.+ solid Na.sup.+ solid conductor conductor Theoretical capacity 117 mAhg.sup.1 305 mAhg.sup.1 236 C < 347 mAhg.sup.1 (based on cathode and anode) Voltage 3.4 V 2.58 V 1.55 V Energy density 398 Whkg.sup.1 787 Whkg.sup.1 366 E < 538 Whkg.sup.1 Working room temperature 270-350 C. about 200 C. temperature Safety dendrite problem Safe Safe and organic electrolyte Cost of materials cheap cheaper cheapest Replenishable no no yes
(28) For the NaAl cell, both the sodium and aluminum are earth-abundant and inexpensive. It should therefore be much cheaper than the lithium-ion battery, and in view of the greater cost of Ni over Al, it should also be cheaper than the ZEBRA battery. In the charged state, both the catholyte and the anolyte are liquid, so they can be replaced after the performance degrades without discarding the whole battery. This would offer a further cost advantage over other battery types. Concerning safety, if the Na.sup.+ conducting separator should crack, sodium would react with NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7, to form NaCl and Al, being in this respect as safe as the ZEBRA battery.
(29) In summary, molten NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 can serve as a catholyte and can deliver a high capacity of 296.4 mAhg.sup.1 at 60% depth of discharge; a 1.55 V discharge voltage, which is higher than expected from aqueous solution potential data, can be obtained with the molten salt medium. NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 as catholyte and molten sodium as anolyte yields a high energy efficiency NaAl battery. Its high energy density, low cost, high safety, and replenishable reserves make the NaAl battery particularly promising in the grid-storage market.
Experimental
(30) Materials and catholyte preparation: NaCl, anhydrous AlCl.sub.3 and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (EMICl), were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Al wool was purchased from Lustersheen. NaSICON was supplied gratis by Ceramatec. The preparation of the NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 and EMIAlCl.sub.4 mixed electrolyte was achieved by mixing of NaCl, AlCl.sub.3 and EMICl according to the molar ratio needed. The mixing of AlCl.sub.3 and NaCl cannot produce a liquid NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 until the temperature is raised above the liquidus temperature, about 158 C. After cooling down, solid NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7 (a mixture of NaAlCl.sub.4 and AlCl.sub.3 according to the phase diagram) was obtained and ground into powder for later use.
(31) The electrochemical property of the catholyte was investigated by cyclic voltammetry (CV) using a potentiostat/galvanostat (Princeton Applied Research, VMP2). A three-electrode cell was employed with platinum as the working and counter electrodes, as well as the reference electrode. The scan was made at 200 C. with a scan rate of 10 mV s.sup.1.
(32) Conductivity determinations: Conductivities of NaAl.sub.2Cl.sub.7, EMIAlCl.sub.4, and their mixtures were surveyed using twin platinum wire dip-type electrodes sealed into a stainless steel threaded caps that were screwed onto glass vials containing the samples loaded under argon in a drybox. Data were taken using a PAR VMP2 potentiostat (Princeton Applied Research) in the frequency range 10-100K Hz, during slow heating from ambient to 200 C.
(33) The battery depicted in
(34) Only a few implementations are described and illustrated. Variations, enhancements and improvements of the described implementations and other implementations can be made based on what is described and illustrated in this document.