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A little wax(蜡) and soap can help build electrodes(电极,电焊条) for cheaper lithium ion batteries, according to a study in August 11 issue of Nano Letters. The one-step method will allow battery developers to explore lower-priced alternatives to the lithium ion-metal oxide1 batteries currently on the market. "Paraffin provides a medium in which to grow good electrode materials," said material scientist Daiwon Choi of the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. "This method will help researchers investigate cathode(阴极) materials based on cheaper transition metals such as manganese(锰) or iron." Consumers use long-lasting rechargeable lithium ion batteries in everything from cell phones to the latest portable gadget2(小玩意,小器具) . Some carmakers want to use them in vehicles. Most lithium ion batteries available today are designed with an oxide of metal such as cobalt(钴) , nickel(镍) , or manganese. Choi and colleagues at PNNL and State University of New York at Binghamton wanted to explore both cheaper metals and the more stable phosphate(磷酸盐) in place of oxide. The Recharge Tale These rechargeable batteries work because lithium is selfish and wants its own electron. Positively3 charged lithium ions normally hang out in metal oxide, the stable, positive electrode in batteries. Metal oxide generously shares its electrons with the lithium ions. Charging with electricity pumps electrons into the negative electrode, and when the lithium ions see the free-floating negative charges across the battery, they become attracted to life away from the metal oxide cage. So off the lithium ions go, abandoning the metal oxide and its shared electrons to spend time enjoying their own private ones. But the affair doesn't last -- using the battery in an electronic device creates a conduit through which the slippery(不稳定的,狡猾的) electrons can flow. Losing their electrons, the lithium ions slink back to the ever-waiting metal oxide. Recharging starts the whole sordid4(肮脏的,卑鄙的) process over. Cheaper, Stabler While cobalt oxide(氧化钴) performs well in lithium batteries, cobalt and nickel are more expensive than manganese or iron. In addition, substituting phosphate for oxide provides a more stable structure for lithium. Lithium iron phosphate batteries are commercially available in some power tools and solar products, but synthesis of the electrode material is complicated. Choi and colleagues wanted to develop a simple method to turn lithium metal phosphate into a good electrode. Lithium manganese phosphate -- LMP -- can theoretically store some of the highest amounts of energy of the rechargeable batteries, weighing in at 171 milliAmp hours per gram of material. High storage capacity allows the batteries to be light. But other investigators5 working with LMP have not even been able to eek out 120 milliAmp hours per gram so far from the material they've synthesized. Choi reasoned the 30 percent loss in capacity could be due to lithium and electrons having to battle their way through the metal oxide, a property called resistance. The less distance lithium and electrons have to travel out of the cathode, he thought, the less resistance and the more electricity could be stored. A smaller particle would decrease that distance. But growing smaller particles requires lower temperatures. Unfortunately, lower temperatures means the metal oxide molecules6 fail to line up well in the crystals. Randomness7 is unsuitable for cathode materials, so the researchers needed a framework in which the ingredients(材料,作料) -- lithium, manganese and phosphate -- could arrange themselves into neat crystals. 点击收听单词发音
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