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[SMM Analysis] Can Anode-less Sodium-ion Battery Cells Become a New Breakthrough for the Next Generation of Sodium-ion Batteries?

iconJun 13, 2025 17:21
Source:SMM
[SMM Analysis: Can Anode-Free Sodium-Ion Battery Cells Become a New Breakthrough for the Next Generation of Sodium-Ion Batteries?] SMM reported on June 13: At a time when the field of energy storage is constantly pursuing innovation and breakthroughs, anode-free sodium-ion battery cells, as an emerging technology, are gradually emerging and attracting widespread attention. With their unique design concepts and potential advantages, they offer new ideas for addressing the many issues faced by traditional batteries, but they also come with a series of challenges that need to be overcome urgently...

SMM News on June 13:

At a time when the energy storage sector is constantly pursuing innovation and breakthroughs, anode-free sodium-ion battery cells, as an emerging technology, are gradually emerging and attracting widespread attention. With their unique design concepts and potential advantages, they offer new ideas for addressing the many issues faced by traditional batteries, but they also come with a series of challenges that need to be urgently overcome.

Anode-free sodium-ion battery cells abandon traditional anode materials and instead use anode current collectors (such as aluminum foil). During the initial charge, sodium metal from the cathode material migrates to the surface of the anode current collector and partially deposits, thereby forming the actual functioning anode. This design greatly simplifies the battery structure, creating the potential for improved battery performance and reduced costs.

From the perspective of advantages, anode-free sodium-ion battery cells show great potential for increasing energy density. By eliminating the anode material, the battery can accommodate more active material within the same volume or weight constraints, potentially significantly increasing energy density. This is undoubtedly a boon for fields such as electric vehicles (EVs) and energy storage systems (ESS), which have stringent requirements for energy density. Based on current research progress, it is expected that EVs using anode-free sodium-ion battery cells in the future may achieve longer driving ranges, and energy storage systems will be able to store more electrical energy, thereby enhancing the operational efficiency of the entire energy system.

Cost reduction is also a prominent advantage of anode-free sodium-ion battery cells. Sodium metal is abundant on Earth and is more affordable compared to rare metals like lithium, providing a solid cost foundation for large-scale applications. Additionally, the anode-free design reduces the types of materials used and processing steps, further compressing manufacturing costs, simplifying the production process, reducing production difficulty and complexity, improving production efficiency, and reducing energy consumption and waste emissions during production, aligning with the concept of sustainable development.

However, the technology of anode-free sodium-ion battery cells is not perfect, and its development still faces many obstacles. In low-temperature environments, the performance of anode-free sodium-ion battery cells is significantly affected. At low temperatures, the ion diffusion rate decreases, and the desolvation process slows down, leading to a high nucleation potential and small metal nucleation. During repeated deposition/stripping processes, highly reactive small aggregates are prone to transforming into "dead metal," reducing coulombic efficiency at low temperatures. Moreover, the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer is brittle at low temperatures, and dendrites are prone to growing on the anode side, seriously affecting the cycle life of the battery.

Furthermore, the high reactivity of sodium leads to uneven deposition behavior of sodium during cycling, easily generating dendrites. These dendrites not only cause unnecessary consumption of the electrolyte but may also puncture the separator, triggering battery short circuits and posing serious safety hazards. Meanwhile, sodium metal undergoes severe volume expansion during deposition and dissolution, causing the SEI layer to rupture, which further exacerbates the occurrence of side reactions. This leads to rapid capacity degradation and a short cycle life of the battery.

Although anode-free sodium-ion battery cells currently face numerous challenges, continuous exploration, innovation, and ongoing technological advancements are expected to gradually overcome these difficulties. In the future, if anode-free sodium-ion battery cells can successfully achieve technological breakthroughs and large-scale commercial applications, they will undoubtedly spark a new revolution in the energy storage sector, providing a strong impetus for promoting global energy transformation and sustainable development.

 

 


SMM New Energy Research Team

Cong Wang 021-51666838

Rui Ma 021-51595780

Disheng Feng 021-51666714

Yanlin Lv 021-20707875

 

 

 

 

 

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