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The 12-minute EV charge dream is coming closer to reality

Scientists suppress the dendrite growth that has kept next-gen batteries stuck in the lab.

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A Korean research team says it has solved the biggest technical hurdle standing between today’s EVs and a 12-minute charge.

The breakthrough targets dendrites. Those are the needle-like crystals that grow inside lithium-metal batteries during fast charging. They’ve kept advanced cells from leaving the lab by shortening lifespan and increasing fire risk.

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Now researchers at KAIST have developed an intelligent coating that rearranges itself. It keeps lithium ions moving smoothly, even under extreme electrical load.

A self-adjusting layer that mimics traffic flow

The team added thiophene to the battery electrolyte. That creates a protective barrier with a flexible electronic structure.

Think of it like a smart traffic system that shifts lanes as cars merge. When lithium ions move, the charge distribution inside the layer changes. It creates optimal pathways on the fly.

Simulations confirmed this design beats existing commercial additives. The result was consistent charging at currents exceeding 8 mA per cm². That’s more than double what the field usually considers high.

Real-world testing confirms mechanical stability

The researchers didn’t just simulate success. They used in-situ atomic force microscopy to watch the battery at the nanometer scale during operation.

Even under high power, lithium deposited and removed itself uniformly on the surface. That visual proof confirms the mechanical reliability needed for real driving conditions.

The technology also works with common cathode materials including lithium iron phosphate and lithium nickel-cobalt-manganese oxide. That means it could integrate into existing EV battery production lines without a complete overhaul.

What comes next for ultra-fast EVs

This work tackles the fundamental instability at the electronic structure level. It’s not just a material tweak.

By enabling stable high-current operation, it opens the door for lithium-metal batteries to finally reach real-world use. The team specifically mentions ultra-long-range electric vehicles as an immediate target.

But the applications stretch further. Urban air mobility and next-gen energy storage systems could also benefit from the density and speed this design allows.

The next step will be moving from demonstration to scaled manufacturing. That process will determine how soon you might see that 12-minute charge at an actual charging station.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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