Breaking 15:00 Citi evacuates Dubai offices following Iranian threats against U.S. banks 14:50 Iran missile campaign across Gulf enters second week of escalating conflict 14:45 G7 Countries release strategic oil reserves ahead of leaders’ meeting 14:20 Shell and TotalEnergies declare force majeure on Qatari LNG supply contracts 13:20 European gas prices fall sharply as Trump signals Iran war may end soon 12:50 ISS deorbit scheduled to begin in 2028 before planned 2030 ocean descent 12:20 Meta acquires Moltbook, a social network built for AI agents 11:50 Oil rebounds above $89 after historic $38 swing amid Iran war turmoil 11:20 MOTHRA telescope in Chile aims to reveal faint cosmic web structures 10:50 Global markets swing as Iran war sends mixed signals to investors 10:20 Volkswagen plans 50,000 job cuts in Germany as profits plunge 09:50 Dubai gold trades at rare discount as war disrupts global bullion flows 08:20 United Nations warns of humanitarian crisis in Cuba amid fuel shortages 07:50 Artificial intelligence tools accelerate drug and protein research breakthroughs 07:00 Porsche operating profit collapses after costly retreat from electric strategy 23:00 U.S. lawmakers warn of potential ground troop deployment in Iran 22:45 North Korea backs Iran's appointment of new Supreme Leader 22:00 Brazilian drugmaker EMS plans international expansion after buying Sanofi’s Medley unit 20:30 War in Iran: about 140 U.S. troops injured, Pentagon says 19:15 Bank of America strengthens technology banking team with four senior hires 16:20 G7 weighs oil reserve release as Iran war sends markets swinging 15:20 US LNG exporters gain windfall as Iran conflict disrupts global gas supply

Silver coating makes solid-state batteries five times crack-resistant

Friday 16 January 2026 - 13:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Silver coating makes solid-state batteries five times crack-resistant

Researchers at Stanford University have developed an ultra-thin silver coating for solid electrolytes that boosts crack resistance nearly fivefold, tackling a key barrier to commercializing next-generation lithium-metal batteries. Published January 16 in Nature Materials, the breakthrough promises safer batteries with higher energy density and faster charging compared to current lithium-ion technology.

Solid-state batteries aim to replace flammable liquid electrolytes with durable ceramic materials like LLZO, composed of lithium, lanthanum, zirconium, and oxygen. These ceramics, while theoretically superior, suffer from micro-cracks during charge cycles that lead to failure. The Stanford team applied a 3-nanometer silver layer, then heated samples to 300 degrees Celsius, allowing silver atoms to diffuse 20 to 50 nanometers deep and replace smaller lithium atoms.

Dissolved silver ions, not metallic silver, proved key to hardening the ceramic and blocking crack initiation and propagation. Lead researcher Xin Xu, now an assistant professor at Arizona State University, noted this nanoscale doping transforms how fissures form on electrolyte surfaces, enabling robust solid electrolytes for advanced energy storage.

This protective approach suits real-world manufacturing, where stacking cathodes, electrolytes, and anodes inevitably creates surface imperfections that prove costly to eliminate entirely. Associate Professor Wendy Gu, the study's senior author, emphasized that a simple silver treatment realistically shields against lithium infiltration during rapid charging, preventing crack expansion.

Tests focused on localized sample areas rather than full cells, leaving scalability and long-term performance over thousands of cycles for future validation. Silver is not unique; larger metal ions like copper show promise, though less effectively, opening paths to sulfur-based electrolytes or sodium batteries that ease lithium supply strains.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.