Climate Change| SEA-SALT BatteriesNew Substitute For Lithium

While nuclear fusion and geoengineering

are still decades away from being

implemented. advances in technology are

still being worked upon and there seems

to be a new invention which can be a

reality sooner . we are talking about sea

water,

pretty soon your electronics could be

powered by an ultra cheap sea salt

battery . researchers have built a new

cheap battery with four times the energy

storage capacity of lithium,

constructed from sodium sulfur , a type of

molten salt that can be processed from

seawater. the battery is low cost and

more environment friendly than other

existing options . according to a

study from the University of Sydney, it

could be a breakthrough for renewable

energy in particular.

moreover as the climate heats up, there

is an urgent need to switch to renewable

energy sources like wind and solar. but

Renewables are not always consistent as

other sources. which means that batteries

are needed to store this electricity for

later use.

and as we all know many batteries are

built with the rare earth metals like

lithium graphite and Cobalt, but these

Metals come at a cost.

lithium extraction can result in water

shortages ,biodiversity loss, damage to

the ecosystem and soil degradation. for

example when the metal is produced using

evaporation ponds, it takes approximately

2.2 million liters to produce one metric

ton.

it’s also financially costly to mine at

scale

and to achieve climate neutrality. the EU

will require 18 times more lithium than

it currently uses by 2030 and almost 60

times more by 2050. and interestingly

the European commission president Ursula

Wonderland said in September that,

lithium and rare Earths with the rare

earth metals will soon be more important

than oil and gas .and this is where the

sea salt battery could provide an

alternative.

molten salt batteries are not A New

Concept , they’ve been around for 50 years

but they’ve been an inferior alternative

with a short energy life cycle but this

new battery is different.

scientists alter the electrodes to

improve the reactivity of the sulfur. a

key element to determine the storage

capacity because sea salt is everywhere.

it could provide a scalable alternative

to lithium-ion batteries.

researchers now plan to improve and

commercialize the new cells.

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