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2026-03-31
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Triweekly Patent Update – Free Version

Lithium-ion batteries – electrolytes – solid & semi-solid

QINGTAO POWER TECHNOLOGY (SHANGHAI) CO LTD [CN] / CN 121572632 A

A METHOD FOR PREPARING A SOLID ELECTROLYTE MEMBRANE, THE SOLID ELECTROLYTE MEMBRANE, THE ELECTRODE, AND THE BATTERY

A dry-process method achieves solid electrolyte membranes at ≤10 μm through simultaneous biaxial stretching of a PVDF-HFP-based composite, enabling thinner membranes than conventional dry calendering approaches.

First, polyvinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene (PVDF-HFP) and polyethylene oxide (PEO) were blended with dibutyl phthalate (DBP) plasticizer (160°C, 35 r/min); LLZO (Li6.25La3Zr2Al0.25O12, garnet-type) and LATP (NASICON-type oxide) particles were then incorporated. Second, the mixture was melt-extruded (90–150°C zones, 400 rpm), T-die cast, and calendered (90°C, 50 MPa, 15 min) to a 100 μm primary film. Third, the film was simultaneously biaxially stretched (75°C, 350 mm/min, 3× in each direction) and heat-set under tension (100°C, 2 min). Fourth, supercritical CO2 (45°C, 20 MPa, 4 h) removed DBP, yielding a porous 10 μm membrane.

The membrane was hot-laminated onto an LMO : NCM (7 : 3) positive electrode (130°C, 60 N/mm) and assembled into hybrid liquid electrolyte cells (wound, aluminum housing) with graphite negative electrodes and PE separators. Cells exhibit rate capacity retentions of 98.0% at 2 C and 98.7% at 3 C, and 91.6% cycle retention after 1000 cycles (1 C/1 C, 25°C). Cell energy is 304.69 Wh at discharge DCR of 0.443 mΩ, versus 285.70 Wh and 1.256 mΩ for cells with a polymer electrolyte membrane. Needle penetration tests confirm no ignition (temperature rise <90°C), versus thermal runaway (>700°C) in comparative liquid electrolyte cells with PE separator only.

Takeaway: Combining a PVDF-HFP / PEO binder system with simultaneous biaxial stretching enables dry-process fabrication of sub-10 μm solid electrolyte membranes that can be roll-to-roll laminated onto positive electrode sheets. The demonstrated cell tests, however, are hybrid liquid electrolyte constructions – the SE membrane serves as a safety insert while a conventional PE separator and liquid electrolyte remain in the cell – and therefore test only the membrane's function as a short-circuit barrier, not its potential as an ionic conductor in a fully solid-state configuration.

The more significant opportunity suggested by this work lies in the porous microstructure generated by supercritical CO2 plasticizer extraction: the open pore network could serve as a scaffold for post-process infiltration of solid electrolyte materials that lack the mechanical ductility to survive biaxial stretching themselves. This would allow mechanically fragile but ionically superior electrolytes to be incorporated into a sub-10 μm membrane geometry that could not be achieved by processing those materials directly.

Lithium-ion batteries – negative electrode (excluding Li metal electrodes)

Shinetsu Chemical Co. / JP 7815518 B1

NEGATIVE ELECTRODE ACTIVE MATERIAL AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING THE SAME

A porous carbon matrix (BET: 1,940 m2/g, pore volume: 1.00 cm3/g, D50: 9 μm) was exposed to humid air to introduce hydroxyl (OH) groups to active sites, then heated under nitrogen until CO gas was detected at ≈7,500 ppm in the exhaust. With CO still present, monosilane (SiH4) was introduced at 350–360°C and 50 kPa, depositing amorphous low-valence nano-silicon oxide (SiOx, 0–3 valence composite) partially bonded to the carbon's oxygen atoms.

After cooling, gradual oxidation with 1% O2/N2 over 48 h raised the bulk oxygen content to 2.5 mass%. Acetylene CVD at 580°C and 10 kPa for 8 h formed a carbon coating, generating Si–C bonds at dangling bond sites and C=O/C–O bonds at the oxide–carbon interface. The 0-valence Si grain size is 0.8 nm (XRD); the surface layer (0–50 nm) exhibits a Si phase structure distinct from the bulk interior.

In half-cells (0.03 C), the anode active material exhibits a capacity of 1,880 mAh/g and a first cycle efficiency of 88%, as compared to 1,825 mAh/g and 85% for material deposited without CO co-presence during silane introduction (bulk phase: Si0+ + SiO2). In full cells (0.7 C charge / 0.5 C discharge), 1,000-cycle retention is 80%, 4 C charge retention is 80% at 500 cycles, and slurry gas generation is 0.1 cc/g (60°C, 1 week), as compared to 72% retention, lithium plating (metallic lithium deposition on the anode surface) at 4 C / 500 cycles, and 2.1 cc/g for the comparative material.

Takeaway: Introducing monosilane into porous carbon in the presence of CO gas released from OH-modified active sites drives deposition of low-valence SiOx (0–3 valence) bonded to carbon oxygen atoms, rather than elemental Si and SiO2. The resulting Si–O bonds suppress electrolyte decomposition and improve Li+ diffusivity, while Si–C bonds formed at dangling bond sites during acetylene CVD enhance structural stability and water resistance, enabling promising cycling stability and fast charge performance.

Lithium-ion batteries – positive electrode

BASF SHANSHAN BATTERY MAT CO LTD [CN] / WO 2026040917 A1

NICKEL-BASED POSITIVE ELECTRODE MATERIAL AND PREPARATION METHOD THEREFOR, LITHIUM-ION BATTERY AND ELECTRIC DEVICE

A Ni0.93Co0.03Mn0.04(OH)2 precursor, LiOH, and ZrO2 (molar ratio 1 : 1.05 : 0.001) were mixed in a high-speed mixer (1800 rpm, 30 min), sintered in ≥96% O2 (3°C/min to 500°C for 2 h, then 740°C for 12 h), washed with deionized water (8°C, solid-liquid ratio 1.0, 700 rpm, 3 min), and vacuum-dried (160°C, 6 h) to yield matrix Li1.01Ni0.929Co0.03Mn0.04Zr0.001O2.

The matrix was mixed with Sb2O5 and PVDF (mass ratio 1 : 0.0027 : 0.0017) in a high-speed mixer (1800 rpm, 30 min), then sintered in O2 (3°C/min) in three stages: 200°C for 2 h, 400°C for 4 h, and 600°C for 8 h, followed by natural cooling and sieving. Residual surface Li2CO3 reacts with Sb2O5 and PVDF to form a composite solid electrolyte coating comprising LiSbO3, LiSbF6, and Li2CO3.

The LiSbO3 : LiSbF6 : Li2CO3 coating (molar ratio 3 : 3.7 : 25.9, 0.86 mass%) also covers primary particle surfaces, as confirmed by EPMA mapping; the primary particle size is 190 nm and the residual lithium is 1114 ppm. In coin half-cells (4.35–3.0 V vs. Li+/Li), the material exhibits a 0.1 C discharge capacity of 234.3 mAh/g, a first coulombic efficiency of 94.2%, a rate capability of 92.2%, a DC internal resistance (DCR) of 15.8 Ω, and a capacity retention of 94.1% after 50 cycles at 45°C, as compared to 226.4 mAh/g, 91.5%, 89.6%, 25.3 Ω, and 85.1%, respectively, for the water-washed matrix without the solid electrolyte coating.

Takeaway: A three-stage dry sintering process converts residual surface Li2CO3 with antimony and fluorine sources into a composite LiSbO3/LiSbF6/Li2CO3 solid electrolyte coating on high-Ni NMC. The coating reduces DC resistance and improves cycle retention at 45°C compared to water-washed uncoated material.

Fuel cells (PEMFC / SOFC / PAFC / AEMFC) – electrochemically active materials

BOSCH GMBH ROBERT [DE] / TUM TECHNISCHE UNIV MUENCHEN IN VERTRETUNG DES FREISTAATES BAYERN [DE] / DE 102024204258 A1

METHOD FOR THE POST-TREATMENT OF PLATINUM ALLOY CATALYST MATERIAL

A post-treatment method for platinum alloy catalyst material (PtxM, M = Co, Ni, Fe, Cu; nanoparticle mean diameter <10 nm) was developed for PEMFC (proton exchange membrane fuel cell) cathodes, targeting pre-emptive extraction of transition metal from deeper particle layers to reduce in-operando contamination.

The catalyst powder is suspended in an acid solvent (nitric, sulfuric, hydrochloric, acetic, and/or formic acid) in a stirred flask at 5–150°C (preferably 25–80°C). O2-rich gas (G1, 0.01–100 vol.% O2) and H2-rich gas (G2, 1–100 vol.% H2), each with N2 or Ar balance, are fed alternately through a glass frit and microcontroller-operated dosing valves at 1–10 bar; cycle duration 5 s to 24 h (preferably 30 s to 30 min). An optional post-annealing step can promote crystal lattice rearrangement.

The alternating gas atmosphere induces chemical potential cycles differing by ≥0.5 V (preferably ≥1 V) on the catalyst surface, replicating in-cell voltage cycling to dissolve transition metal from particle layers that near-surface dealloying methods cannot reach. The O2/H2 gas-cycle post-treated catalyst (6) deliberately releases more transition metal during post-treatment than the untreated reference (6Ref): metal extracted at this stage is no longer available to contaminate the ionomer during cell operation, reducing proton conductivity losses at high current densities (>1000 mA/cm2), where the treated catalyst demonstrates markedly higher cell voltage (Figure). No specific transition metal M is identified for the experimental data shown.

6: Post-treated platinum alloy catalyst material
6Ref: Untreated reference platinum alloy catalyst material
Left chart y-axis (0–2): Normalized transition metal release (arbitrary units)
Right chart axes: Cell voltage U [V] vs. current density I [mA cm-2]

BOSCH GMBH ROBERT [DE] / TUM TECHNISCHE UNIV MUENCHEN IN VERTRETUNG DES FREISTAATES BAYERN [DE] / Patent Image
Takeaway: Alternating O2/H2 gas cycling in an acid suspension induces chemical potential swings of ≥0.5 V that simulate in-cell voltage cycling, extracting transition metal from deeper catalyst particle layers than conventional near-surface dealloying. This reduces in-operando contamination and delivers markedly higher cell voltage at high current densities compared to untreated platinum alloy catalysts.

Other Categories (Excel lists are included for paid users)

  • Lithium metal batteries (excluding Li-S, Li-Air): Excel list
  • Lithium-air batteries: Excel list
  • Lithium-ion batteries – electrolytes – liquid: Excel list
  • Lithium-ion batteries – separators: Excel list
  • Lithium-sulfur batteries: Excel list
  • Na-ion batteries: Excel list

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