Na-Ion can be a lot less expensive. But it’s a lot heavier. (Not a problem for grid-storage.)
As a flashlight enthusiast, I’d be very interested to see if sodium batteries are any better.
deleted by creator
Just make a flat battery and roll it up. 🧌
Material scientists hate this one trick.
There are cylindrical cells available. The capacity is pretty low, 18650 cells are around 1.5AH and 26700 cells are around 3.5AH. They discharge down to 1.5V, so you will get less capacity if you use them in something designed for lithium cells.
Well I’m all about developing new technology and allowing the very best to sell the most.
Maybe someday in the future there will be an alternative to lithium batteries that really is better. But as you said, Sodium batteries aren’t as good.
Can we eat them?
Battery-licking good!
At least once, yes
BYD is supposedly bringing them to production.
https://cleantechnica.com/2023/04/22/the-sodium-ion-battery-is-coming-to-production-cars-this-year/
They are already in production, and sold to consumer, since few days. A french start up is selling an electric screwdriver with a sodium battery.
So the answer to the question about what to do with the excess salt from desalination plants, is make batteries?
Good point !
Now we just need a lot of swimming pools for the chloride.
Have they eliminated the need for sodium to be molten in sodium batteries? If so, that’s great news!
IIRC sodium is the -cathode- in the battery. No molten (RU thinking of reactors?)
I’m not thinking of reactors, though I am aware that molten sodium is used as a coolant fluid. It seems that I was remembering an off-hand comment in a MinutePhysics video from a few years ago. Molten sodium batteries do exist, but regular sodium batteries also exist.
Sodium = Natrium
IDK why English speakers insist on calling it Sodium on an international forum?Because we’re speaking English, not Latin?
Romani ite domum!
I’ve never heard natrium before. I guess I could learn. We could also call pineapples ananas.