Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Chinese researchers develop high-voltage sodium–sulfur battery that could challenge lithium batteries

Add as a preferred source on Google
Lithium battery
Unsplash

A team of researchers in China has just pulled the curtain back on a new sodium-sulfur battery design that could fundamentally change the math on energy storage. By leaning into the very chemistry that has historically made sulfur a headache for engineers, they have managed to build a cell that is incredibly cheap to make but still packs a massive energy punch.

The design, which is currently being tested in the lab, uses dirt-cheap ingredients: sulfur, sodium, aluminum, and a chlorine-based electrolyte. In early trials, the battery hit energy densities over 2,000 watt-hours per kilogram – a figure that blows today’s sodium-ion batteries out of the water and even gives top-tier lithium cells a run for their money.

Sulfur has always been the “white whale” of battery tech because it can theoretically hold a ton of energy

The problem? In standard lithium-sulfur batteries, sulfur tends to create messy chemical byproducts that gunk up the works and kill the battery’s lifespan. This new approach flips the script. Instead of forcing sulfur to just accept electrons, the researchers set up a system where sulfur actually donates them.

It works like this: the battery uses a pure sulfur cathode and a simple piece of aluminum foil as the anode. The secret sauce is the electrolyte, which is a soup of aluminum chloride, sodium salts, and chlorine. When you discharge the battery, sulfur atoms at the cathode give up electrons and react with the chlorine to form sulfur chlorides. Meanwhile, sodium ions grab those electrons and plate themselves onto the aluminum foil.

Recommended Videos

This specific chemical dance side-steps the degradation issues that usually plague sulfur batteries. A porous carbon layer keeps the reactive stuff contained, and a glass fiber separator stops the whole thing from short-circuiting. It’s a complex reaction, but the team proved it runs smoothly and reversibly.

The durability stats here are impressive

The test cells survived 1,400 charge-discharge cycles before they started losing significant capacity. Even more wild is the shelf life: after sitting untouched for over a year, the battery still held onto 95 percent of its charge. That is a huge deal for long-term storage projects where batteries might sit idle for weeks or months.

But the real disruptor is the price tag. Based on the cost of the raw materials, the researchers estimate this battery could cost roughly $5 per kilowatt-hour. To put that in perspective, that is less than a tenth of the cost of many current sodium batteries and miles cheaper than lithium-ion. If they can mass-produce this, it could make storing renewable energy on the grid dirt cheap.

Of course, there is a catch. The chlorine-rich electrolyte they are using is corrosive and tricky to work with safely. Also, these numbers come from lab tests based on the weight of active materials, not a fully packaged commercial cell. Taking this from a beaker to a factory floor is going to be a massive engineering hurdle.

Still, this research is a loud wake-up call. It proves that when standard materials like lithium get too expensive or scarce, getting creative with “unconventional” chemistry can open up doors we didn’t even know existed.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Claude can now join your Slack channels and work alongside your team
Laptop running Claude Fable

For years, AI assistants have been siloed. You open ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Copilot, type a prompt, get an answer, and move on. Anthropic's new Claude Tag feature takes a different approach. Instead of making employees jump into a separate AI chat every time they need help, it brings Claude directly to where many teams already spend their day: Slack.

Add Claude to a channel, grant it access to needed tools, and tag @Claude for help — whether analyzing data, writing reports, reviewing code, or investigating incidents. But Claude Tag isn't just another chatbot integration. Its key differentiator is that Anthropic positions it as a digital coworker for your team, enabling seamless collaboration where multiple users can jointly interact with the same AI within their work environment.

Read more
Getty Images accused AI of wholesale theft. It’s now an official ChatGPT image partner.
Advertisement, Shop, Clothing

The AI industry's most fascinating stories often come from unlikely alliances, and this is certainly one of them. Getty Images, a company that has spent years raising concerns about how AI models are trained and how creative work is used, is now officially partnering with OpenAI.

The new agreement will allow Getty Images' licensed content to appear across ChatGPT's search and discovery experiences. That means users may begin seeing Getty's professionally licensed photos and visual assets integrated into ChatGPT responses, adding more visual context to searches and AI-generated answers. Getty says the goal is to make AI-powered search more useful and trustworthy by relying on high-quality, licensed content rather than the murky sourcing practices that have sparked countless debates across the AI industry.

Read more
Timekettle’s new X1 Meeting Hub does real-time translation for 50 people and fits in your pocket
Fifty participants, five languages, one 199-gram hub, and no booth required.
Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware

Professional conference interpretation setups are notoriously painful. Dedicated booths, trained interpreters, bulky hardware, and a bill at the end of every month that makes you rethink whether the meeting was even required in the first place. 

Timekettle wants to collapse all of that into a single hub that weighs 199 grams (less than modern flagship smartphones). The company just launched the X1 Meeting Interpreter Hub. 

Read more