- Chinese scientists developed a water battery capable of reliably surviving 120,000 charge cycles
- The neutral electrolytes prevented the corrosion that normally destroys aqueous batteries over time.
- The battery reportedly lasts for centuries under normal grid storage operating conditions.
Scientists from the City University of Hong Kong and the Southern University of Science and Technology have developed a new type of water-based battery that could last hundreds of years without losing its capacity over time.
Published in Nature CommunicationsThe device uses synthesized covalent organic polymers as an anode for magnesium and calcium ions instead of traditional battery materials.
The researchers found a specific compound that combines high-density carbonyl with a rigid honeycomb structure that resists corrosion, and this design allows the battery to withstand up to 120,000 charge cycles, which is more than ten times longer than conventional lithium-ion grid storage batteries.
Water batteries are not easy to perfect
Aqueous batteries have always offered safety advantages over lithium-ion batteries because they are non-flammable and have lower initial costs.
However, they typically store less energy and break down over time due to electrolyte breakdown that corrodes their metal components.
The water-based electrolyte in conventional designs often becomes extremely acidic or alkaline, gradually destroying the battery from the inside.
Organic polymers rarely perform well under these conditions because they break down quickly when exposed to such hostile chemical environments.
The new design uses a neutral electrolyte with a pH of exactly 7.0, eliminating the extreme conditions that normally cause corrosion.
The specific compound used in the device, called hexacetone tetraaminodibenzo-p-dioxin, maintains a stable planar honeycomb structure throughout the life of the battery.
This structural stability prevents the gradual reduction in capacity that smartphone users know all too well from their older devices.
The scientists calculated that at current grid storage usage rates of 1.1 cycles per day, its battery could operate for about 300 years before needing replacement.
More importantly, the electrolytes used in this new design are completely non-toxic and can be safely disposed of directly into the environment.
The research team even noted that the electrolyte solution is so harmless that it could be used as a tofu brine for home cooking without any health risk.
Trade obstacles remain
The battery still faces the same fundamental limitation as all aqueous devices, which is a lower energy density than lithium-ion systems.
A battery that lasts three centuries but takes up twice as much space may still struggle to find commercial adoption in space-constrained environments.
The manufacturing cost of specialized organic polymers is also unclear, and large-scale production could reveal unexpected economic barriers.
Grid storage operators care about life cycle and security, but they also care about dollars per kilowatt hour delivered over the life of the facility.
A 300-year battery is only useful if the utility still exists 300 years from now and the economy has to function for the next decade, not just the next century.
The absence of toxic materials is a real advance, but the market will decide whether the trade-offs make sense.
Scientists have most likely solved a chemical problem, but the commercialization problem is just beginning.
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