The present invention relates to the conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy. More particularly, the present invention relates to a miniature electrochemical cell, which is defined as having a total size or volume that is less than 0.5 cc. Such so-called miniature electrochemical cells enable numerous new and improved medical device therapies.
U.S. Pat. No. 10,957,884 to Dianetti et al., which is assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference, describes a miniature electrochemical cell housed in a metallic casing having three main components: a base plate supporting a cylindrically-shaped annular sidewall having an open upper end closed with a cover plate or lid. The base plate, annular sidewall and lid are each of a metal material, for example, titanium, and preferably, commercially pure Grade 2 titanium.
The annular sidewall is selectively coated with a dielectric or ceramic material to provide electrical isolation of the to-be-housed first active material, for example, a cathode active material, from the metallic annular sidewall. A sealing glass is applied to the planar inner surface of the base plate adjacent to the peripheral edge of the base plate. The annular sidewall is supported on this sealing glass. The annular sidewall and base plate are then heated to a temperature that is sufficient to achieve a glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric or ceramic material coating the annular sidewall and a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate. The thickness of the sealing glass combined with that of the glass seal bonded at the base plate and at the dielectric or ceramic material coating the annular sidewall is sufficient to ensure electrical isolation between the base plate and the supported annular sidewall.
A first active material, for example, a cathode active material in a secondary electrochemical system, is deposited into the cavity formed by the base plate/annular sidewall subassembly. The cathode active material is in electrical continuity with the base plate, which serves as the positive terminal for the cell, but which is electrically isolated from the annular sidewall by the above-described sealing glass and dielectric or ceramic material. A separator is supported on the exemplary cathode active material.
Separately, a second active material, for example, an anode active material in a secondary electrochemical system, is contacted to an inner surface of the lid. The metallic lid/second active material subassembly is then seated on an inner step of the annular sidewall, and the lid and sidewall are welded together. In this construction, the lid connected to the annular sidewall is in electrical continuity with the anode active material to thereby serve as the negative terminal for the cell.
Finally, the electrode assembly is activated with an electrolyte filled into the casing through a fill port generally centered in the lid. The fill port is then sealed with a closure member welded therein or by melting the material of the lid into a solid mass closing the fill port.
U.S. Pub. No. 2022/0085473 to Arellano et al., which is assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference, describes a miniature electrochemical cell that is similar to the cell described by the above-referenced '884 patent to Dianetti et al. However, instead of centering the electrolyte fill port in the lid, the fill port is axially aligned with an annulus residing between the inner surface of the annular sidewall and the electrode assembly. This allows the casing to be filled with electrolyte using a vacuum filling process so that the activating electrolyte readily wets the anode and cathode active materials and the intermediate separator.
U.S. Pub. No. 2022/0166095 to Dianetti et al., which is also assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference, describes a miniature electrochemical cell that is similar to the cells described by the above-referenced '884 patent to Dianetti et al. and the '473 publication to Arellano et al. However, instead of the annular sidewall being supported on the sealing glass contacted to the planar inner surface of the base plate adjacent to the peripheral edge of the base plate, the base plate is provided with an annular channel that extends part-way into the thickness of the plate adjacent to its peripheral edge. A sealing glass is provided in the channel and the annular sidewall is supported on this sealing glass. The annular sidewall and base plate are then heated to a temperature that is sufficient to achieve a glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric or ceramic material coating the annular sidewall and a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate. Since the glass in the annular channel seals against three surfaces of the annular sidewall, which are the lower edge intermediate the inner and outer sidewall surfaces, the glass seal is robust enough to withstand the heat that is generated when the lid is welded to the upper edge of the annular sidewall. In a similar manner as described in the above-referenced '473 publication to Arellano et al., the lid has a sealed electrolyte fill port that is axially aligned with an annulus residing between the inner surface of the annular sidewall and the electrode assembly.
However, a vexing problem in a miniature rechargeable or secondary electrochemical cell having a size or total volume that is less than 0.5 cc is that such cells using titanium, particularly commercially pure Grade 2 titanium, for the base plate, annular sidewall and lid have shown unusually fast open circuit voltage (OCV) drop during a 21-day aging process. This is shown in
An exemplary secondary electrochemical cell according to the present invention is built in a discharged condition with the cathode being a lithiated material. The cathode active materials was lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (LiNiaMnbCo1-a-bO2) while graphite was the anode material. In the graph of
Destructive analysis showed that the base plate serving as the cathode current collector exhibited signs of corrosion when the exemplary electrochemical cell was charged to 4.2 V. It is postulated that corrosion of titanium increases the electron density in the cathode which attracts lithium ions from the electrolyte to maintain charge balance. At the same time, titanium ions (corrosion product) are transported to the anode where they are reduced on the anode surface. Lithium ions exiting from the anode give electrons to the titanium ions. This reaction mechanism discharges the cell, which brings the OCV down.
Interestingly, however, corrosion related OCV drop has not been observed in larger (production) implantable rechargeable electrochemical cells of a similar chemistry. It is believed that the magnitude of the corrosion reaction is insignificant in a larger, production cell compared to the cell capacity. In contrast, a miniature electrochemical cell having a size or total volume that is less than 0.5 cc has comparatively much less capacity. Even a minor unwanted reaction such as corrosion of titanium can consume a significant amount of the cell capacity, which negatively impacts OCV and cell performance.
Thus, there is a need for an improved miniature secondary electrochemical cell that exhibits improved open circuit voltage. The present miniature secondary electrochemical cell provides a solution to this problem with the result that the cell has significantly reduced titanium corrosion and, consequently, improved open circuit voltage during the 21-day aging period and thereafter improved discharge efficiency during charge and discharge cycling.
In a miniature secondary electrochemical cell according to the present invention, a dielectric or ceramic material selectively coated to the titanium annular sidewall effectively isolates the sidewall from contact with electrolyte. A carbonaceous coating contacting the lid intermediate the anode active material effectively isolates the lid from the electrolyte. That leaves the titanium base plate as a place where electrolyte can contact titanium and potentially cause an undesirable corrosion reaction that could degrade the cell's open circuit voltage and thereafter negatively impact discharge efficiency during charge and discharge cycling. The base plate serves as the positive terminal in electrical continuity with the cathode active material through an intermediate carbonaceous coating. However, the cathode active material and the carbonaceous coating are not impervious enough to prevent electrolyte from coming into contact with the base plate. For that reason, an aluminum layer is contacted to the base plate followed by the carbonaceous coating intermediate then cathode active material. Together the carbonaceous and aluminum layers serve as a cathode current collector and as an impervious barrier that prevents electrolyte from contacting the base plate. An exemplary electrolyte comprises LiPF6 dissolved in a mixture of ethylene carbonate (EC) and ethyl methyl carbonate (EMC).
Thus, according to the present invention, corrosion of the titanium base plate serving as the positive terminal for the cell is prevented by contacting aluminum to the base plate. This aluminum does not prevent the annular sidewall coated with the ceramic or dielectric material from forming a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate nor does it prevent formation of the glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric material coating the annular sidewall. Instead, the aluminum prevents corrosion of the titanium base plate, which is believed to be the root cause of diminished open circuit voltage graphically depicted in
In that respect, the present invention relates to a miniature secondary electrochemical cell comprising a casing housing an electrode assembly. A miniature electrochemical cell is defined as a cell having a size or total volume that is less than 0.5 cc. The casing comprises an annular sidewall extending to an upper edge spaced from a lower edge. A dielectric material coats the lower edge and a portion of the inner surface of the annular sidewall. A titanium lid hermetically closing the upper edge of the annular sidewall has an electrolyte fill port. A ring-shaped sealing glass forms a glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric material coating the annular sidewall and a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate. To prevent unwanted corrosion of the titanium base plate, however, an aluminum layer serving as a cathode current collector is contacted to the inner surface of the base plate, spaced inwardly from the ring-shaped sealing glass.
The electrode assembly housed inside the casing comprises an anode active material in electrical continuity with the titanium lid. A carbonaceous coating contacted to the lid intermediate the anode active material effectively isolates the electrolyte from the lid serving as the negative terminal for the cell. The cathode active materials is in electrical continuity with the aluminum layer contacting the base plate serving as the positive terminal. One preferred cell chemistry is a lithium-ion electrochemical cell comprising a carbonaceous anode and a lithium metal oxide-based cathode, such as of LiCoO2 or lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (LiNiaMnbCo1-a-bO2). The lithium-ion electrochemical cell is completed with a liquid electrolyte filled into the casing through the fill port, and the fill port is then hermetically sealed.
Moreover, while the present cell designs are adapted for miniature electrochemical cells, they are also applicable to cells that have a total volume that is greater than 0.5 cc and are not classified as “miniature”.
These and other aspects of the present invention will become increasingly more apparent to those skilled in the art by reference to the following detailed description and to the appended drawings.
Turning now to the drawings,
The thickness of the base plate 12 is defined as the distance “g” (
An annular layer of dielectric material 22, for example, an alumina (Al2O3) ceramic material, is coated on the lower edge 14C and the inner surface of the lower cylindrically-shaped portion 14D of the annular sidewall 14. For ease in manufacturing, the dielectric material 22 may also be coated on the outer surface 14A of the sidewall 14. While the dielectric material 22 is shown in
The base plate 12, sealing glass 24 and annular sidewall 14 comprising the casing base subassembly 18 are then heated to a temperature that is sufficient to burn off any organic binders that may be present in the glass 24 and flow the glass into intimate contact with the dielectric material 22 contacting the lower annular edge 14C and to have the glass wick part-way up and along the height of the dielectric material coating the inner surface and possibly the outer surface of the lower cylindrically-shaped portion 14D of the sidewall 14. Upon cooling, the glass 24 forms a hermetic glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric material coating the annular sidewall 14 and a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate 12. The sealing glass 24 has a thickness that ranges from about 0.002 inches to about 0.0025 inches between where it contacts the dielectric material 22 supported on the annular sidewall 14 and the facing distal surface 12G, lower surface 12F and proximal surface 12H of the annular channel 12D in the base plate 12. This is sufficient to ensure electrical isolation between the base plate 12 and the annular sidewall 14.
As shown in
As shown in
The cathode active material 28 is deposited on the carbonaceous coating 26 using any one of many suitable methods (i.e., dispensed, pressed, preformed, sprayed, sputter deposition, evaporation deposition, tape casted, and as a coating). While not intending to limit the present electrochemical cell 10, the cathode active material 28 has a thickness extending to its upper and lower faces 28B, 28C that ranges from about 5 μm to about 1 mm. In other embodiments, the cathode active material 28 has a thickness that is greater than 1 mm. Suitable cathode active materials 28 for secondary electrochemical systems are selected from LiCoO2, LiNiO2, LiMnO2, TiS, FeS, FeS2, and lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (LiNiaMnbCo1-a-bO2).
If desired, the cathode active material 28 is mixed with a binder material and a solvent prior to being deposited on the conductive carbonaceous coating 26. Binders such as, but not limited to, a powdered fluoro-polymer, more preferably powdered polytetrafluoroethylene or powdered polyvinylidene fluoride and solvents, such as but not limited to, trimethylphosphate (TMP), dimethylformamide (DMF), dimethylacetamide (DMAc), tetramethylurea (TMU), dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), or n-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) may be used.
In addition, up to about 10 weight percent of a conductive diluent may be added to the cathode active material 28 to improve conductivity. Suitable materials for this purpose include acetylene black, carbon black, and graphite or, a metallic powder such as powdered nickel, aluminum, titanium, and stainless steel.
A separator 30 (
Illustrative separator materials include non-woven glass, polypropylene, polyethylene, microporous materials, glass fiber materials, ceramics, the polytetrafluorethylene membrane commercially available under the designations ZITEX (Chemplast Inc.), the polypropylene membrane commercially available under the designation CELGARD (Celanese Plastic Company Inc.) and DEXIGLAS (C. H. Dexter, Div., Dexter Corp.). Other separator materials that are useful with the present invention include woven fabrics comprising halogenated polymeric fibers, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,415,959 to Pyszczek et al., which is assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference. Examples of halogenated polymeric materials that are suitable for the present invention include, but are not limited to, polyethylene tetrafluoroethylene, which is commercially available under the name Tefzel, a trademark of the DuPont Company, polyethylenechlorotrifluoroethylene which is commercially available under the name Halar, a trademark of the Allied Chemical Company, and polyvinylidene fluoride.
An electrolyte fill opening or port 32 extends through the thickness of the lid 16 at the embossed annular rim 16E. A sleeve 16G as a portion of the lid surrounds the fill port 32. The sleeve portion 16G is a continuous extension of the embossed annular rim 16E so that the sleeve and rim together define the fill port 32. In that respect, the fill port 32 resides substantially off-center in the lid 16, spaced a relatively short distance inwardly from the annular peripheral edge 16A. As shown in
In the secondary electrochemical system shown in
Illustrative anode active materials 34 for a secondary electrochemical system include carbon-based materials selected from coke, graphite, acetylene black, carbon black, glass carbon, hairy carbon, and mixtures thereof, or lithiated materials selected from Li4Ti3O12, lithiated silver vanadium oxide, lithiated copper silver vanadium oxide, lithiated copper sulfide, lithiated iron sulfide, lithiated iron disulfide, lithiated titanium disulfide, lithiated copper vanadium oxide, LixCuwAgyV2Oz with 0.5≤x≤4.0, 0.01␣w≤1.0, 0.01≤y≤1.0 and 5.01≤z≤6.5, and mixtures thereof.
The lid 16 has a diameter that is sized to fit into the second or upper cylindrically-shaped portion 14F of the annular sidewall 14, supported on the step 14E. In this seated position, the outer planar surface 16B of the lid 16 is substantially co-planar with the upper annular edge 14B of the sidewall 14. As shown in
An activating electrolyte (not shown) is then filled into the casing through the fill port 32. The fill port 32 is in fluid flow communication with an annular space or annulus 38 provided between the outer annular edges 28A and 34A of the respective active materials 28, 34 and the inner surface of the lower cylindrically-shaped portion 14D (
Without this axial alignment, the electrode assembly would need to be soaked in electrolyte and the remaining casing void volume filled with additional electrolyte prior to welding the lid 16 to the annular sidewall 14. Soaking the electrode assembly in electrolyte creates multiple problems. First, internal voids within the opposite polarity electrode active materials are not optimally filled with electrolyte without a vacuum drawing electrolyte into all available porosity. A second issue relates to the difficulty in welding the lid 16 to the annular sidewall 14 in the presence of electrolyte. Heat generated by welding can cause electrolyte to evaporate and form out-gassing byproducts that can contaminate the weld 36, thereby reducing weld integrity.
Thus, the purpose of the fill port 32 in fluid flow communication with the annular space 38 between the outer annular edges 28A and 34A of the opposed polarity active materials 28 and 34 and the inner surface of the lower cylindrically-shaped portion 14D (
Further, the distance “e” (
The fill port 32 is preferably closed with a closure plug (not shown) that has been press-fit into the opening 32 defined by the sleeve 16G as a continuous extension of the embossed rim 16E. This is followed by welding the closure plug to the embossed rim 16E and sleeve 16G. Alternately, the fill port 32 is closed by directing a laser beam at the embossed rim 16E and sleeve 16G to cause the materials of the rim and sleeve to melt and flow into the port 32, and then cool to hermetically seal the port 32. Suitable closure systems for sealing an electrolyte fill port are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,443 to Paulot et al., U.S. Pat. No. 7,128,765 to Paulot et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 10,446,825 to Voss et al. These patents are assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference.
The activating electrolyte is a nonaqueous and ionically conductive material mixture serving as a medium for migration of ions between the anode and cathode active materials during conversion of ions in atomic or molecular forms which migrate from the anode active material to the cathode active material. Nonaqueous electrolytes that are suitable for the present electrochemical cell 10 are substantially inert to the anode and cathode active materials, and they exhibit those physical properties necessary for ionic transport, namely, low viscosity, low surface tension and wettability.
A suitable electrolyte has an inorganic, ionically conductive lithium salt dissolved in a mixture of aprotic organic solvents comprising a low viscosity solvent and a high permittivity solvent. The inorganic, ionically conductive lithium salt serves as the vehicle for migration of the anode ions to intercalate or react with the cathode active material 34. Suitable lithium salts include LiPF6, LiBF4, LiAsF6, LiSbF6, LiClO4, LiO2, LiAlCl4, LiGaCl4, LiC(SO2CF3)3, LiN(SO2CF3)2, LiSCN, LiO3SCF3, LiC6F5SO3, LiO2CCF3, LiSO6F, LiB(C6H5)4 and LiCF3SO3, and mixtures thereof.
Low viscosity solvents useful with the present electrochemical cell 10 include esters, linear and cyclic ethers and dialkyl carbonates such as tetrahydrofuran (THF), methyl acetate (MA), diglyme, trigylme, tetragylme, dimethyl carbonate (DMC), 1,2-dimethoxyethane (DME), 1,2-diethoxyethane (DEE), 1-ethoxy, 2-methoxyethane (EME), ethyl methyl carbonate, methyl propyl carbonate, ethyl propyl carbonate, diethyl carbonate, dipropyl carbonate, and mixtures thereof, and high permittivity solvents include cyclic carbonates, cyclic esters and cyclic amides such as propylene carbonate (PC), ethylene carbonate (EC), butylene carbonate, acetonitrile, dimethyl sulfoxide, dimethyl formamide, dimethyl acetamide, γ-valerolactone, γ-butyrolactone (GBL), N-methyl-pyrrolidinone (NMP), and mixtures thereof. An exemplary electrolyte comprises LiPF6 dissolved in a mixture of ethylene carbonate (EC) and ethyl methyl carbonate (EMC).
For the secondary electrochemical cell 10, the combined thicknesses of the conductive carbonaceous coating 26, the cathode active material 28, the separator 30, and the anode active material 34 is somewhat less than the distance measured from the upper surface 12B of the base plate 12 to the lid inner 16C surface aligned with the step 14E. That way, there is enough free space inside the casing to accommodate expansion and contraction of the electrode stack or anode/cathode electrode assembly as the electrochemical cell 10 of the secondary chemistry is subjected to charge and discharge cycles.
The secondary electrochemical system illustrated in
With the aluminum current collector 15 brazed to the base plate 12 having a surface area ranging from about 1 mm2 to about 1 cm2, the outer surface 16B of the lid 16 and the upper edge 14B of the annular sidewall 14 having a combined surface area ranging from about 1 mm2 to about 1 cm2, and with the height of the casing as measured from the outer surface 12C of the base plate 12 to the upper edge 14B of the annular sidewall 14 ranging from about 250 μm to about 2.5 mm, the electrochemical cell 10 can be built with a total volume that is less than 0.5 cc. As a hermetically sealed “miniature” coin-type enclosure or casing, the secondary electrochemical cell 10 is capable of being implanted in human or animal body tissue for extended periods of time.
As previously discussed in the Prior Art section of this specification, when miniature rechargeable coin-type cells were built using Grade 2 titanium for the casing base subassembly 18 hermetically sealed to the casing upper or lid subassembly 20 (
Interestingly, corrosion related OCV drop has not been observed in larger (production) implantable electrochemical cells of a similar chemistry. It is believed that the magnitude of the corrosion reaction is insignificant in larger production cells compared to cell capacity. In contrast, a miniature electrochemical cell having a total size or volume that is less than 0.5 cc has a relatively small capacity. Even a minor unwanted reaction such as corrosion can consume a significant amount of the cell's capacity which can negatively impact OCV and cycling efficiency.
Accordingly, addition of the aluminum current collector 15 provides sufficient electrical conductivity between the cathode active material 28/carbonaceous layer 26 and the base plate 12 serving as the negative terminal, but physically isolates the titanium base plate from contact with the electrolyte. This effectively eliminates the corrosion mechanism that had previously occurred when the aluminum layer 15 was not present.
The upstranding annular web 121 separating the annular channel 12D of the base plate 12 from the recess 40 is covered with an insulative material 44, such as a layer of aluminum oxide or a polymeric material. The insulative material 44 is chemically resistant and impermeable to the electrolyte (not shown) activating the electrochemical cell 10. Together the aluminum current collector disc 42 and the insulative material 44 prevent electrolyte from contacting the titanium metal comprising the base plate 12.
While one weld is sufficient to connect the aluminium disc 42 to the base plate 12, it is believed that at least two welds help to distribute more evenly the electrical current generated by the cell 10 across the base plate 12 serving as the positive electrical contact or terminal. In a similar manner as with the embodiment shown in
Further, a method for providing a secondary electrochemical cell 10 according to the present invention comprises first providing a casing. That is done by providing a base plate 12 and an annular sidewall 14, which, due to its biocompatibility, are preferably made of commercially pure Grade 2 titanium. The base plate 12 has an annular channel that extends part-way into the thickness of the base plate and that is spaced inwardly from an annular peripheral edge 12A thereof. The annular sidewall 14 extends to an upper edge 14B spaced from a lower edge 14C and has an outer annular surface 14A spaced from an inner surface. The inner surface is provided with a step 14E. A dielectric material 22 is coated on the lower edge 14C and at least a portion of the inner surface of the annular sidewall 14.
Next, a ring-shaped sealing glass 24 is nested in the annular channel 12D of the base plate 12 and the annular sidewall 14 is seated on the glass. This subassembly is heated to form a glass-to-metal seal with the base plate 12 and a glass-to-ceramic seal with the dielectric material 22 at the lower edge 14C of the annular sidewall 14. If desired, the dielectric material 22 can only coat the lower cylindrically-shaped portion 14D of the annular sidewall. That way, the sealing glass 24 seals directly to the base plate 12 and the annular sidewall 14.
To segregate the titanium base plate 12 from contact with electrolyte, a thin layer 15/42/48 of aluminum is coated on the inner surface of the base plate. This is followed by a thin layer of carbonaceous material layer 26 being coated on the aluminum layer 15/42/48. The carbonaceous layer and the aluminum layer together serving as a cathode current collector can extend across the entire inner surface of the base plate 12 to the sealing glass 24 or, in an alternate embodiment, the base plate is provided with a central recess 40 and the carbonaceous material layer 26 and aluminum layer 15/42/48 are contacted to the annular sidewall and the inner surface of the base plate recess. This forms an annular web 121 between the central recess 40 and the annular channel 12D supporting the sealing glass 24 and the annular sidewall 14. If the carbonaceous material layer 26 and aluminum layer 15/42/48 does not cover the annular web 121, an insulating material, such as a layer of aluminum oxide or a polymeric material, contacts the web.
Separately, a lid 16, preferably of commercially pure Grade 2 titanium, is provided. The lid 16 has an electrolyte fill port 32 extending through its thickness from a lid outer surface 16B to a spaced apart inner 16C surface. The lid 16 also has a recess 16D extending inwardly from the lid outer surface into its thickness.
An electrode assembly is then provided. The electrode assembly comprises a cathode active material 28 and an anode active material 34. The anode active material 34 is in electrical continuity with the lid 16 serving as the negative terminal for the cell. The cathode active material 28 is in electrical continuity with the base plate 12 through the carbonaceous layer 26 supported on the aluminum current collector 15/42/48 with the base plate serving as the positive terminal. A separator 30 segregates the cathode active material 28 from directed physical contact with the anode active material 34.
The electrochemical cell is completed when the lid 16, preferably of titanium, is seated on the step 14E of the annular sidewall 14 and welded 36 to the upper annular edge 14B thereof. Importantly, the lid 16 is provided with an embossed rim 16E extending between its outer peripheral edge 16A and the recess 16D. When the lid 16 is welded to the annular sidewall 14, the rim 16E provides sufficient material to both absorb heat created at the weld and to provide material that flows into the gap between the lid 16 and the sidewall 14 to provide a hermetic seal between these casing members. The heat absorbed by the rim 16E helps to prevent structural compromise of the glass-to-metal and glass-to-ceramic seals between the annular sidewall 14 and the base plate 12.
This is followed by filling an activating electrolyte into the casing through the electrolyte fill port 32 in the lid 16 and then closing the fill port. An exemplary electrolyte comprises LiPF6 dissolved in a mixture of ethylene carbonate (EC) and ethyl methyl carbonate (EMC). Also, an annulus 38 resides between the inner surface of the annular sidewall 14 and the electrode assembly. The electrolyte fill port 32 is axially aligned with this annulus 38. That way, electrolyte filled into the casing through the fill port 32 readily wets the electrode assembly to thereby promote extended cell discharge.
It is appreciated that various modifications to the inventive concepts described herein may be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. Nos. 63/253,588, filed on Oct. 8, 2021, and 63/345,980, filed on May 26, 2022.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63253588 | Oct 2021 | US | |
63345980 | May 2022 | US | |
63323562 | Mar 2022 | US |