• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12 days ago

    Sodium batteries are thermal batteries, right? So they need turbines to recover the energy into electricity? Or are these chemical sodium batteries?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      162 days ago

      Chemical. It’s in the article:

      Battery prototype

      The researchers also created a battery prototype using the new material, NaxV2(PO4)3, demonstrating significant energy storage improvements. NaxV2(PO4)3, part of a group called “Na superionic conductors” or NaSICONs, is designed to let sodium ions move smoothly in and out of the battery during charging and discharging, according to a press release.

      The material has a unique way of handling sodium, allowing it to work as a single-phase system. This means it remains stable as it releases or takes in sodium ions. This allows the NaSICON to remain stable during charging and discharging while delivering a continuous voltage of 3.7 volts versus sodium metal, higher than the 3.37 volts in existing materials, according to researchers.

      • @Aqarius
        link
        English
        12 days ago

        I wonder, though, if having to use Vanadium defeats the point of dropping Lithium for Sodium.