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27 лютага 2026, 10:05
Major battery breakthrough paving way for EV upgrade
BEIJING, 27 February (BelTA - China Daily) - Chinese scientists have
developed a lithium metal battery that boasts an energy density of more
than 700 watt-hours per kilogram and stable performance at extremely low
temperatures, marking a significant advancement in the production of
high-energy batteries for electric vehicles. The research paper was
published on Thursday in the science journal Nature.
Chen Jun, an
academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and vice-president of
Nankai University in Tianjin, was among the researchers who led the
breakthrough. Chen said the team has replaced oxygen atoms with fluorine
ones. It designed and synthesized novel fluorinated hydrocarbon solvent
molecules, creating a new electrolyte system based on lithium-fluorine
coordination.
Laboratory tests showed that the battery could
achieve energy density above 700 watt-hours per kilogram, maintaining
nearly 400 Wh/kg at -50 C.
Energy density and low-temperature performance are the biggest bottlenecks hindering the widespread adoption of EVs, Chen said.
To
address this challenge, his team redesigned the battery electrolyte at
the molecular level. By developing fluorinated hydrocarbon solvent
molecules and establishing a lithium-fluorine coordination system, the
researchers improved ion transfer and enabled stable operation at
ultrahigh energy densities and extremely low temperatures.
"High-energy
batteries using this electrolyte have vast potential in new energy
vehicles, embodied intelligent robots and the low-altitude economy, as
well as in polar regions, aerospace and aviation," he said.
Chen's
team has also made significant progress in advancing cutting-edge
technologies toward practical applications. Earlier this month, the team
collaborated with Chinese automaker Hongqi to release a mass-producible
ultrahigh energy density lithium-rich manganese solid-liquid battery
system. The system boasts a cell energy density exceeding 500 Wh/kg,
which translates into a driving range of more than 1,000 kilometers on a
single charge for equipped vehicles, according to the research team.
Yan
Zhenhua, a professor at Nankai University's College of Chemistry, said
that in comparison, current mainstream lithium-ion batteries typically
offer energy densities of 160 to 300 Wh/kg, support vehicle driving
ranges of up to about 800 kilometers per charge, and operate reliably at
temperatures between -20 C and -30 C.
He said the vehicle-mounted battery uses a self-developed composite electrolyte that improves both safety and durability.
"It
not only achieves a leap in energy density but, more important, solves
the high-cost and high-risk challenges associated with lithium metal
batteries, significantly enhancing cycle life and intrinsic safety," Yan
added.
Lu Tianjun, Party secretary and general manager of China
Automotive New Energy Battery Technology Co, said that vehicles equipped
with the batteries and capable of exceeding 1,000 kilometers per charge
are expected to enter mass production by the end of this year.
"This serves as a model and a leading example of collaboration between universities and enterprises," he said.
"This
battery, whether in terms of energy density, technological advancement
or progress in application, represents a leading level both domestically
and internationally," Lu said. "Conservatively, its performance would
mean an improvement of about 50 percent compared with current
technologies."
Chen, the Nankai University researcher, said that
translating scientific breakthroughs into practical technologies
requires close collaboration between researchers and industry. "We can't
always stay in the ivory tower. Our goal is to address real industrial
challenges," he said.