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Preventing dangerous short circuits in lithium batteries

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH

NEWS RELEASE

TUM researchers reveal surprising growth of destructive dendrites in electrolytes

Preventing dangerous short circuits in lithium batteries

  • Danger not limited to electrodes
  • Protective layer itself affected by dendrite growth
  • New findings aid in search for alternative materials

Dendrites are considered the most dangerous destroyers of lithium batteries — tiny metal structures that can cause short circuits. In the worst case, they can cause batteries to burn or explode. A research team at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has now discovered that such structures can form not only at the electrodes but also in polymer-based electrolytes. This new finding is crucial for the stability of future solid-state batteries .

Lithium-metal batteries are among the most promising technologies for energy storage. They offer significantly more energy in less space — and at a lower weight. However, one phenomenon slows down their development: tiny, needle-like metal structures called dendrites, made of lithium. They can grow uncontrollably inside the battery and cause devastating short circuits. Until now, solid electrolytes, including polymer-based electrolytes, have been considered a way to suppress this growth.

“Electrolytes are responsible for transporting lithium ions back and forth between the two electrodes inside a battery — making the flow of current possible in the first place,” explains Fabian Apfelbeck. The physicist is pursuing his doctorate in the research group of Prof. Peter Müller-Buschbaum at TUM’s Chair of Functional Materials and is funded by the Excellence Cluster e-conversion.

Polymer-based electrolytes offer greater stability and safety than liquid electrolytes, because they cannot leak or ignite. They also reliably separate the electrodes from each other and thus prevent short circuits. “However, our measurements show that dendrite growth can also occur directly inside the polymer electrolyte — right in the material that is actually supposed to protect against dendrites,” says Fabian Apfelbeck, first author of the study published in Nature Communications.

Using a nanofocus to look inside the battery

The findings, therefore, challenge a central assumption in battery research. Prof. Peter Müller-Buschbaum explains: “Until now, it was assumed that dendrite growth occurs only at the interface between electrode and electrolyte. The fact that it also appears far away from that interface surprised us. This new knowledge helps us develop — and further improve — materials in which such internal crystallization processes do not occur in the first place — enabling more efficient, safer, and longer-lasting energy storage.”

The researchers used a particularly precise method for their investigations: so-called nanofocus wide-angle X-ray scattering experiments, carried out at the German Electron Synchrotron DESY in Hamburg. Using an X-ray beam with a diameter of just 350 nanometers, they could visualize the microscopic changes inside a polymer-based electrolyte during battery operation for the first time. To do so, they used a specially developed miniature cell that allows the battery to be observed under real operating conditions.

Publication:

F. A. C. Apfelbeck, G. E. Wittmann, M. P. Le Dû, L. Cheng, Y. Liang, Y. Yan, A. Davydok, C. Krywka, P. Müller-Buschbaum: Local crystallization inside the polymer electrolyte for lithium metal batteries observed by operando nanofocus WAXS. Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-64736-w

Further information:

Additional material for media outlets:

Photos for download: https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1832818

Subject matter expert:

Prof. Dr. Peter Müller-Buschbaum

Technical University of Munich

TUM School of Natural Sciences

Chair of Functional Materials

Excellence cluster e-conversion

muellerb@ph.tum.de

Media contact at Excellence Cluster e-conversion:

Dr. Caroline Zörlein

Public Outreach Manager

Excellence cluster e-conversion

caroline.zoerlein@tum.de

Contact at TUM Corporate Communications Center:

Ulrich Meyer

Press Spokesman

+49 89 289 22779

ulrich.meyer@tum.de

www.tum.de

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of the world’s leading universities in terms of research, teaching and innovation, with around 700 professorships, 53,000 students and 12,000 staff. TUM’s range of subjects includes engineering, natural and life sciences, medicine, computer sciences, mathematics, economics and social sciences. As an entrepreneurial university, TUM envisages itself as a global hub of knowledge exchange, open to society. Every year, more than 70 start-ups are founded at TUM, which acts as a key player in Munich’s high-tech ecosystem. The university is represented around the world by its TUM Asia campus in Singapore along with offices in Beijing, Brussels, Mumbai, San Francisco and São Paulo. Nobel Prize laureates and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde and Rudolf Mößbauer have conducted research at TUM, which was awarded the title of University of Excellence in 2006, 2012 and 2019. International rankings regularly cite TUM as the best university in the European Union.

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