
Lighting the future: ultrathin copper collectors for enhanced battery performance
GA, UNITED STATES, March 31, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Scientists have developed ultralight and ultrathin copper current collectors that could redefine lithium battery technology. These collectors, far lighter than traditional copper foils, significantly enhance cell-level energy density. This leap forward in efficiency and weight reduction is poised to transform the performance of portable electronics and electric vehicles, where lightweight, high-capacity batteries are crucial for progress.
As electric vehicles, portable devices, and smart grids continue to expand, the demand for high-energy-density batteries has never been greater. Copper current collectors, although critical for battery function, contribute heavily to the overall weight and cost of these systems, limiting advancements in energy storage technology. Current approaches to reduce their weight often result in compromised mechanical strength or poor scalability. This underscores the urgent need for innovative, scalable solutions to create lightweight, high-performance current collectors.
A research team from Michigan State University has made a significant breakthrough, as detailed in their April 26, 2024 publication in eScience. Using an advanced electroless plating method, they fabricated ultralight copper current collectors on a polymer scaffold, reducing their weight by 70% compared to conventional copper foils. The new design retains exceptional mechanical strength and electrochemical performance, providing a cost-effective and scalable way to increase energy density in lithium-ion batteries without requiring changes to existing battery chemistries.
The innovative technique involves coating copper onto a 5 μm polyethylene scaffold, creating a current collector with an areal mass of just 1.72 mg/cm² — a 68% reduction compared to standard options. This ultrathin, ultralight design boosts cell-level energy density by 5 – 10% while maintaining volumetric energy density. Additional tests showed the collectors exhibit excellent thermal stability and tensile strength comparable to traditional foils. Batteries equipped with these collectors demonstrated improved cycling performance and higher energy efficiency, underscoring the material's readiness for industrial deployment. The simplicity and scalability of this method offer a practical path for integration into existing production processes.
"Reducing the weight and thickness of current collectors has long been a bottleneck in advancing battery technology," explained Dr. Chengcheng Fang, lead researcher of the study. "This solution not only addresses these challenges but also offers a scalable and cost-efficient pathway to elevate energy storage systems to new heights."
The ultralight current collectors have far-reaching implications for energy storage technologies. In electric vehicles, they could enable longer ranges and reduce costs, while in portable devices, they could lead to lighter, more efficient designs. The collectors' seamless compatibility with existing battery architectures ensures they can be swiftly adopted into manufacturing pipelines, accelerating the transition toward more sustainable and efficient energy solutions. This innovation marks a pivotal step in reimagining the future of batteries, laying the groundwork for lightweight, high-capacity systems that meet the growing demands of a rapidly electrifying world.
eScience – a Diamond Open Access journal (free for both readers and authors before 30/06/2025) cooperated with KeAi and published online at ScienceDirect. eScience is founded by Nankai University and aims to publish high-quality academic papers on the latest and finest scientific and technological research in interdisciplinary fields related to energy, electrochemistry, electronics, and environment. eScience has been indexed by SCIE, CAS, DOAJ and Scopus. The First Impact Factor (2023) is 42.9. The founding Editor-in-Chief is Professor Jun Chen from Nankai University. He is an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a fellow of The World Academy of Sciences. eScience has published 22 issues, which can be viewed at https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/escience.
References
DOI
10.1016/j.esci.2024.100271
Original Source URL
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esci.2024.100271
Lucy Wang
BioDesign Research
email us here

Distribution channels: Energy Industry, Technology
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Submit your press release