Video

Inside SLAC’s Battery Lab

Stanford graduate student Zhi Wei Seh shows how he prepares prototype batteries in SLAC's energy storage laboratory and then tests them to see how many charge-discharge cycles they can endure without losing their ability to hold a charge.

 

Details

ah

ziwei say I'm a graduate student working

in professor uterus group so right now

we are at the energy storage lab at SLAC

National Laboratory in Stanford

University lithium-ion batteries are

currently widely used in many consumer

devices today such as laptops and cell

phones

however there's every increasing demand

for better batteries today for many

emerging applications such as electric

vehicles for example electric vehicle

right now might be able to travel say 75

miles and with the technology that we

develop in our lab we can potentially

extend the driving range to about 4 to

500 miles which is like about five times

longer in current lithium-ion batteries

today the positive electrode also known

as the cathode is usually made up of

lithium metal oxide and what we are

developing is this next generation

cathodes based on sulfur sulfur not only

can store about five times more charge

per unit weight compared to little metal

oxides it is also low cost and widely

available

here in our lab we are taking the new

sulfur based materials that we developed

and mixing them with carbon to form the

cathode material which would then be

assembled into a coin cell with lithium

as the anode and this coin cell would

then be tested to see the amount of

charge you can deliver during cycling

and we have been seeing some pretty

impressive performance so far many labs

all around the world

have also started to demonstrate

impressive cycling performance for

lithium sulfur batteries and moving

forward we can definitely see a future

with our laptops cell phones and

electric vehicles running on these

batteries which can potentially last

about five times longer than current

ones we have today

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