City
Epaper

Indian scientists design fast charging sodium-ion battery

By IANS | Updated: May 19, 2025 17:48 IST

New Delhi, May 19 A research team at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), an ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 19 A research team at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DST) has developed a super-fast charging sodium-ion battery (SIB), it was announced on Monday.

A battery built on sodium instead of lithium could help the country to become self-reliant in energy storage technology — a key goal of the Indian government’s Atmanirbhar Bharat mission.

This is based on a ‘NASICON-type’ cathode and anode material, that can charge up to 80 per cent in just six minutes and lasts over 3,000 charge cycles.

Unlike conventional SIBs that suffer from sluggish charging and short lifespan, this new battery uses a clever mix of chemistry and nanotechnology.

The scientists led by Professor Premkumar Senguttuvan and PhD scholar Biplab Patra, engineered a novel material for the anode and optimised it in three critical ways -- shrinking the particles to nanoscale, wrapping them in a thin carbon coat, and improving the anode material by adding a small amount of aluminium.

These tweaks made sodium ions move faster and more safely, enabling both speed and durability.

In a world racing towards electrification—from cars to villages—one thing remains crucial: affordable, fast, and safe batteries. While lithium-ion batteries have powered this revolution so far, they are costly. Besides, lithium resources are limited and geopolitically constrained.

However, scientists in Bengaluru may have just found a powerful alternative.

Beyond just cost, these sodium-ion batteries could power everything from electric vehicles and solar grids to drones and rural homes, making clean energy accessible where it's needed the most.

The technology has been tested and validated through high-end methods, including electrochemical cycling and quantum simulations.

What makes it especially exciting is that it not only supports rapid charging but also avoids the fire and degradation risks of traditional batteries.

While more development is needed before these batteries hit the market, the discovery marks a significant step forward, said the ministry.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Russia must not sabotage diplomacy": Volodymyr Zelenskyy calls for "additional pressure" on Moscow after aerial attacks

International"Sri Lanka will always find India by its side": PM Modi assures Colombo of support in aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah

InternationalUS Supreme Court refuses deployment of National Guard in Chicago

InternationalEpstein files: US Department of Justice releases 30,000 pages of documents; terms Larry Nassar letter "fake"

InternationalSri Lankan Foreign Affairs Minister Vijitha Herath expresses gratitude towards India for assistance after Cyclone Ditwah

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyRBI announces Rs 3 trillion liquidity boost to through OMOs, forex swap

TechnologyMinister advises India Post to drive strategic biz growth, boost regional outreach

TechnologyGovt reaffirms commitment to integrate surveillance, strengthen labs to combat influenza

TechnologyOver 4,500 Industrial Parks playing key role in India’s big push for growth

TechnologyExperts call for ramping up science and tech investment in India