Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are confident that the future of batteries lies in manganese compounds, which will make them cheaper and more capacious. To prove this, the researchers created a cathode material high in the mineral that is 30 times cheaper than cobalt. But it’s not just about the price. Potentially, cathodes with high manganese content will provide higher energy storage density and a number of other benefits.

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In their work on more advanced battery electrodes, the researchers studied so-called disordered rock salt (DRX) materials. This is not the rock salt that is also called table salt. Typically, DRX are oxides, such as lithium oxide, but not necessarily. Scientists have already confirmed the unusually high potential of DRX materials for the manufacture of battery anodes and cathodes. But they discovered a significant drawback – a low level of cycling. They were quickly depleted – they became unusable as storage devices and conductors of ions.

«In cathode materials, there is typically a trade-off between energy density and cycling stability… and in this work, we aim to push the envelope by developing new cathode chemistry,” the inventors explain. “The (introduced) family of materials has high energy density and good cycling stability because it uses two main types of cathode materials—rock salt and polyanionic olivine—so it has the benefits of both.”

In other words, scientists selected a ratio of DRX and polyanions (this is a large range of compounds with an excess of negatively charged groups) that would maintain a high energy density and the possibility of multiple charge exchange. A certain problem was the high mobility of oxygen in the cathode when charging batteries with high voltage – another highlight of the new batteries, but it was solved by introducing an oxygen-binding substance – phosphorus.

Ideally, electrodes based on DRX materials can provide up to 350 mAh/g, while traditional cathodes provide energy storage densities of no more than 200 mAh/g. The addition of polyanions will ensure their stability for many charge and discharge cycles, and the use of manganese instead of nickel and, especially, cobalt will make the production of batteries cheaper. But all this is in the future. There is still a lot of research work to be done before commercial production of electrodes from DRX materials becomes a reality.

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