This new battery design could boost your EV’s range

    By Moinak Pal
Published December 26, 2025

A team of South Korean scientists has just reported a massive breakthrough in electric vehicle battery tech, revealing an “anode-free” lithium metal battery that nearly doubles energy density without making the battery any bigger. This work—a joint effort between POSTECH, KAIST, and Gyeongsang National University—could be the key to finally giving EVs the long driving range and cold-weather reliability they’ve been missing.

The research team, led by Professor Soojin Park and Dr. Dong-Yeob Han at POSTECH, showed off a battery with an energy density of 1,270 Wh/L. For context, most lithium-ion batteries in today’s EVs sit around 650 Wh/L. Volumetric density is a huge deal for car manufacturers because every inch and every pound counts when you’re designing a vehicle’s chassis.

The secret sauce here is the “anode-free” design. In a standard battery, you have a graphite anode that acts as a storage house for lithium. In this new version, that house is gone. When you charge the battery, lithium ions move from the cathode and plate themselves directly onto a copper collector. By removing the bulky anode, you free up a ton of internal space, allowing you to pack in more power without making the battery physically larger.

This concept has been the “holy grail” of battery science for years, but it’s notoriously hard to pull off. Usually, lithium deposits unevenly, forming tiny, needle-like spikes called dendrites. These spikes can punch through the battery’s internal layers, causing short circuits, fires, or a very short lifespan.

First, they developed a “Reversible Host”—a polymer frame filled with silver nanoparticles that act like a guide, ensuring the lithium plates down smoothly. Second, they used a specially “Designed Electrolyte” that creates a protective surface layer of lithium oxide and lithium nitride. This layer essentially acts as a shield, stopping those dangerous dendrites from growing while still letting ions flow freely.

The test results were impressive. Even under stressful conditions, the battery kept nearly 82 percent of its capacity after 100 cycles. Crucially, the team tested this using “pouch cells,” which are much closer to the actual battery formats used in real cars. This makes the technology look far more likely to move from a lab bench to a factory floor.

For anyone looking to buy an EV, this could mean way more miles on a single charge and much less “range anxiety” during the winter. While we don’t have a commercial release date yet, the researchers are confident they’ve found a realistic path toward a safer, high-capacity battery that could actually survive the demands of daily driving.

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