A German startup believes it has the recipe for electrical car battery cells which can be cheaper, extra power dense, and fewer problematic for the atmosphere than present lithium-ion cells. However commercialization appears a great distance off.
Theion introduced Thursday in a press launch that it’s near finishing a 15 million euro (roughly $16.2 million at present alternate charges) Sequence A spherical to growth of its sulfur-crystal battery chemistry. It is primarily based on proprietary anode expertise that Theion hopes will prolong battery life—one of many major obstacles to sulfur-based chemistries.

Theion sulfur-crystal EV battery growth
With this chemistry, Theion is aiming for power density of 1,000 Wh/kg, which is about triple that of modern nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) cells at this time, together with the 4680 cells used within the Tesla Cybertruck. Such power density would enable for a lot lighter cells with out sacrificing vary, or elevated vary from the identical quantity.
Theion claims it might obtain this with out utilizing nickel or cobalt, addressing environmental and human-rights issues related to the mining of these metals. General, Theion claims its cells may have a one-third decrease carbon footprint—and value—in comparison with typical cells. That is as a result of, because the agency notes in its launch, sulfur is the sixteenth most considerable factor on Earth, and prices a lot lower than the uncooked supplies of NMC cells.

Stellantis STLA Medium platform
However as Theion emphasizes, longevity in cycle life would be the problem for sulfur-crystal batteries. The startup believes its batteries want to keep up efficiency over 1,000 cost/discharge cycles to be commercially viable, a goal it goals to construct as much as, after preliminary testing of 500 Wh/kg cells at 500 cycles, earlier than beginning manufacturing.
Analysis into lithium-sulfur batteries for EVs goes again at the least a decade, and we have seen spectacular claims about their skill to spice up EV vary earlier than. Stellantis has even partnered with not one, however two startups—Lyten and Zeta Power—that goal to commercialize the tech, maybe by the top of the last decade. However it stays to be seen if any of those efforts—Theion’s included—will overcome the hurdles and get sulfur batteries into manufacturing EVs.