Cornell's Breakthrough in Battery Safety: New Crystal Design for Efficient Lithium-Ion Transport
Martin A. Due?as
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Summary: Researchers at Cornell University have developed a groundbreaking porous crystal that could revolutionize solid-state lithium-ion batteries. Key points include:
Abstract: We report a new supramolecular porous crystal assembled from fused macrocycle-cage molecules. The molecule comprises a prismatic cage with three macrocycles radially attached. The molecules form a nanoporous crystal with one-dimensional (1D) nanochannels. The supramolecular porous crystal can take up lithium-ion electrolytes and achieve an ionic conductivity of up to 8.3 × 10–4 S/cm. Structural analysis and density functional theory calculations reveal that efficient Li-ion electrolyte uptake, the presence of 1D nanochannels, and weak interactions between lithium ions and the crystal enable fast lithium-ion transport. Our findings demonstrate the potential of fused macrocycle-cage molecules as a new design motif for ion-conducting molecular crystals.
Reference: Wang, Y., Wang, K., Ai, Q., Funni, S. D., Garudapalli, A., Fang, Q., ... & Zhong, Y. (2024). Supramolecular Assembly of Fused Macrocycle-Cage Molecules for Fast Lithium-Ion Transport. Journal of the American Chemical Society. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.4c08558
Hashtags: #BatterySafety #LithiumIonBatteries #MaterialsScience #EnergyStorage #CornellResearch #SolidStateBatteries #NanotechnologyInnovation