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NanotechBlogsBattery Electrolyte Stays Solid at Room Temperature yet Conducts Ions Like a Liquid
Battery Electrolyte Stays Solid at Room Temperature yet Conducts Ions Like a Liquid
Nanotech

Battery Electrolyte Stays Solid at Room Temperature yet Conducts Ions Like a Liquid

•January 29, 2026
0
Nanowerk
Nanowerk•Jan 29, 2026

Why It Matters

The breakthrough offers a safer, non‑flammable alternative to liquid electrolytes while delivering performance comparable to conventional solid‑state materials, potentially accelerating the adoption of high‑energy lithium batteries.

Key Takeaways

  • •Frozen ethylene carbonate conducts 0.64 mS cm⁻¹ at 25 °C
  • •Lithium transference number reaches ~0.8 in solid state
  • •Cells cycled over 400 times without shorting
  • •Crystalline matrix creates ion‑hopping pathways with low energy barriers
  • •Operating window limited to ~0 °C–room temperature

Pulse Analysis

The battery industry has long wrestled with the trade‑off between liquid electrolytes, which provide high ionic conductivity but pose safety risks, and solid electrolytes, which are safer yet often suffer from poor interfacial contact and sluggish ion transport. The new frozen ethylene carbonate electrolyte sidesteps these issues by leveraging a high‑freezing‑point solvent that solidifies above ambient temperature while retaining a conductive network of liquid micro‑domains. This hybrid architecture delivers conductivity on par with many oxide‑based solid electrolytes, yet it does so with a simple, scalable formulation that avoids high‑temperature processing or moisture‑sensitive sulfides.

At the microscopic level, the solidified electrolyte forms a crystalline lattice of ethylene carbonate interspersed with isolated pockets of concentrated lithium‑salt solution. Lithium ions move via a hopping mechanism along oxygen‑rich channels, encountering energy barriers of only 0.24‑0.26 eV—lower than those in garnet ceramics or even frozen aqueous systems. The result is a high lithium‑ion transference number (~0.8), meaning most of the ionic current is carried by lithium rather than anions, which improves plating uniformity and suppresses dendrite formation. Battery cells built with this electrolyte demonstrated stable cycling for more than 400 charge‑discharge cycles at room temperature, a stark contrast to the premature failure of comparable liquid‑electrolyte cells.

While the temperature window (approximately 0 °C to room temperature) currently limits immediate commercial deployment, the concept opens a new research pathway: designing “ice electrolytes” that combine the mechanical robustness of solids with the ion‑transport efficiency of liquids. If future formulations can extend operability to sub‑zero conditions or integrate mixed‑solvent systems without compromising conductivity, manufacturers could produce safer, longer‑lasting lithium‑ion packs for electric vehicles, grid storage, and aerospace applications. The study therefore marks a pivotal shift, proving that frozen organic electrolytes can be both stable and functional, and it sets the stage for next‑generation solid‑state battery technologies.

Battery electrolyte stays solid at room temperature yet conducts ions like a liquid

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