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My battery is better than yours! ... but is it really?

18.09.2024

To date, there are no uniform standards for research into solid-state batteries, which are also to be used in e-mobility in the long term - even though billions are being invested in this area worldwide. Researchers at the University of Bayreuth have identified the reasons for this and report on them in the journal “Nature Energy”.

“At least once a week we hear about a new breakthrough in battery cell performance that is set to revolutionize e-mobility or energy storage in general. However, very few of these 'hyped up' reports make it into applications outside the lab. In many cases, this is because they cannot be reproduced outside the original laboratory,” reports Prof. Dr. Nella M. Vargas-Barbosa, Chair of Electrochemistry at the Bavarian Center for Battery Technology (BayBatt) at the University of Bayreuth. She is the lead author of a recently published article in “Nature Energy” on this topic.

In this study, the researchers measured how much the properties of simple test cells varied de facto: 21 research groups with research and industry-recognized expertise in solid-state batteries were provided with the same battery materials and a predefined electrochemical test procedure - but each group used its own method for assembling the cells as well as individual, non-standardized measurement techniques. “We now report on the huge differences in the way the battery cells were assembled and how they performed in comparison, including variations in the applied pressure and the composition of the negative electrode.” The spread of performance data between the differently built battery cells ended up being immense. While this may be worrying, it is a first step towards a necessary improvement. The study identified some of the cell preparation conditions that can strongly influence battery performance, such as the amount of lithium metal in the negative electrode.

“This study is special because it involves many international groups that are established in the field of solid-state batteries. We all collectively recognize that we need to do more to improve the comparability and reproducibility of the work we report on.”

This study is also part of the work of the FestBatt competence cluster funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research with over 180 researchers at 22 research institutions in Germany. In addition to the Bayreuth working groups led by Nella Vargas-Barbosa, Michael Danzer and Christian Plank, the FestBatt partner institutions JLU Giessen (Janek working group), University of Münster (Zeier working group), TU Munich (Gasteiger working group), Fraunhofer IWS (battery technology, F. Hippauf) and Fraunhofer IFAM (electrical energy storage, J. Schwenzel) are also involved in the study.

To the open access publication "Benchmarking the Reproducibility of All-Solid-State Battery Cell Performance" (Nature Energy, 2024).

Read the complete press release by the University of Bayreuth here.

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