With electrical vehicles becoming increasingly popular, researchers at the Mie University in Japan are starting to feel hard-pressed to come up with a new class of batteries, capable of extending the driving range of these cars far beyond their current limits.
The breathing battery, researchers led by professor Nobuyuki Imanishi say, may enable electric cars to travel more than 482 kilometres on a single charge.
Regular lithium-ion power-storage devices allow a maximum range of around 160 kilometres.
The main difference between lithium-ion and lithium-air batteries is that the latter replaces the traditional cathode - a key battery component involved in the flow of electric current - with air.
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That makes the rechargeable metal-air battery lighter with the potential to pack in more energy than its commercial counterpart.
One of the main components researchers are working on is the batteries' electrolytes, materials that conduct electricity between the electrodes.
There are currently four electrolyte designs, one of which involves water.
Imanishi's team developed a layered approach, sandwiching a polymer electrolyte with high conductivity and a solid electrolyte in between the lithium electrode and the watery solution.
The result was a unit with the potential to pack almost twice the energy storage capacity, as measured in Watt hours per kilogramme (Wh/kg), as a lithium-ion battery.
"Our system's practical energy density is more than 300 Wh/kg. That's in contrast to the energy density of a commercial lithium-ion battery, which is far lower, only around 150 Wh/kg," Imanishi said.
Researchers presented their findings at the National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS) in Dallas, US.