🔋 Lithium-ion Battery
Definition · Structure · Working (Charge & Discharge) · Significance · Applications · Disadvantages · Critical Minerals · India Policy · Updated Current Affairs · PYQs · MCQs
→ M. Stanley Whittingham
→ John B. Goodenough
→ Akira Yoshino
For developing the modern lithium-ion battery. High Yield
| Property | Lithium-ion Battery | Comparison |
|---|---|---|
| Energy density (volumetric) | ~250–700 Wh/L | 2–3× better than NiMH or Ni-Cd |
| Voltage per cell | ~3.6V | 3× more than Ni-Cd (~1.2V) |
| Self-discharge rate | ~1.5–2% per month | Much lower than NiMH (~15–20%/month) |
| Cycle life | 500–2,000+ cycles | Better than most alternatives |
| Memory effect | None | Ni-Cd batteries suffer from memory effect |
| Toxic materials | No cadmium | Ni-Cd batteries contain toxic cadmium |
| Cost vs Ni-Cd | ~40% higher | Higher cost — main barrier to adoption |
Parts of a Lithium-ion Battery. The battery consists of five key components arranged in layers: CATHODE (+, left grey block): Made of lithium-metal oxide (e.g., LiCoO₂ — shown as green/red molecule clusters). The positive electrode — lithium ions are hosted here when the battery is fully charged. ANODE (−, right orange block): Made of lithium-carbon (graphite — shown as hexagonal carbon network). The negative electrode — lithium ions intercalate between carbon layers when the battery is fully charged. POROUS SEPARATOR (middle blue block with holes): A permeable membrane that physically separates anode and cathode (prevents short circuit) but allows lithium ions (Li⁺, red dots) to pass through. ELECTROLYTE (surrounds all): A lithium salt (e.g., LiPF₆) dissolved in an organic solvent — conducts lithium ions between electrodes. Does NOT conduct electrons. LITHIUM IONS (red dots): The carriers of charge — they shuttle between anode and cathode through the electrolyte during charge/discharge cycles.
| Component | Material | Charge State | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cathode (+) Positive electrode | Lithium metal oxide: • LiCoO₂ (lithium cobalt oxide) • LiMn₂O₄ (lithium manganese oxide) • LiFePO₄ (lithium iron phosphate) • NMC (lithium nickel manganese cobalt) | Rich in Li⁺ when discharged; Li⁺ extracted when charged | Source of lithium ions. Choice of cathode determines performance (energy density, safety, cost, cycle life). |
| Anode (−) Negative electrode | Graphite (most common). Silicon anodes being developed (higher capacity but expansion issues). | Rich in Li⁺ (intercalated in graphite layers) when charged; Li⁺ released when discharged | Stores lithium ions during charging. Graphite allows Li⁺ to intercalate between carbon layers reversibly. |
| Electrolyte | Lithium salt (e.g., LiPF₆) dissolved in organic solvent (ethylene carbonate etc.) | Always present — ionic conductor | Allows Li⁺ ions to flow between electrodes. Does NOT conduct electrons (forces them through external circuit = electricity). |
| Separator | Microporous polymer membrane (polyethylene or polypropylene) | Always present — passive | Keeps cathode and anode physically apart (prevents short circuit). Allows Li⁺ ions to pass through its tiny pores. If separator fails → thermal runaway. |
| Current Collectors | Aluminium (cathode side) + Copper (anode side) | Always present | Collect electrons from electrodes and carry them to the external circuit. |
Anode: Graphite (carbon) — Anode = A-graphite (remember A-G)
Electrolyte: Lithium Salt in solvent — LiSalt
Separator: Porous Polymer — physical barrier
In UPSC PYQs: Cathode materials = Cobalt, Nickel, Manganese (lithium-metal oxides). Graphite (anode) is also a cathode material in some questions — careful!
Discharging Cycle — Powering the Load. When the battery is connected to a load (device), the LOAD bar (top) is connected and electrons (e⁻) flow through the external circuit. ANODE (−, right purple section — graphite): Lithium ions (Li⁺) deintercalate from graphite layers. The graphite is oxidised → releases Li⁺ into the electrolyte AND releases e⁻ into the external circuit. SEPARATOR (centre, green section): Li⁺ ions are small enough to pass through the microporous separator while electrons cannot. CATHODE (+, left green section — lithium metal oxide): Li⁺ ions arrive from the electrolyte AND electrons arrive from the external circuit (through the load) → they recombine → lithium is reduced and intercalated into the cathode material (e.g., CoO₂ + Li⁺ + e⁻ → LiCoO₂). The electron flow through the load = useful electrical energy. Process continues until all Li⁺ have migrated from anode to cathode.
Li⁺ ions enter the electrolyte
Electrons enter the external circuit → flow through the load = electricity generated
Electrons arrive from external circuit (after powering the load)
Li⁺ + e⁻ → recombine and intercalate into cathode material
Charging Cycle — Restoring Energy with External Power. When a charger (external power source) is connected, it forces current in the REVERSE direction — the opposite of discharging. Power source (top): Positive terminal connected to cathode (+), negative terminal connected to anode (−). CATHODE (left green section): External power forces Li⁺ ions OUT of the cathode material (LiCoO₂ → CoO₂ + Li⁺ + e⁻) — cathode is oxidised during charging. ANODE (right purple section — graphite): Li⁺ ions migrate through the separator → intercalate back into graphite layers, and electrons from the power source arrive at the anode (C₆ + Li⁺ + e⁻ → LiC₆) — anode is reduced during charging. The arrows show ions and electrons moving in the OPPOSITE direction compared to discharging. Charging complete = all Li⁺ are back in the graphite anode = battery fully charged.
LiCoO₂ → CoO₂ + Li⁺ + e⁻
Li⁺ enter electrolyte; electrons enter external circuit
C₆ + Li⁺ + e⁻ → LiC₆
Lithium re-intercalated into graphite layers
CHARGE (power → battery): Li⁺ flows Cathode → Anode. Like pumping water uphill (needs energy input).
The electrons ALWAYS flow in the external circuit (that's your electricity). Li⁺ ALWAYS flows through the electrolyte (internal).
| Why Lithium? | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Most electropositive element | Electropositivity = how easily an element forms positive ions (cations). Lithium forms Li⁺ most easily of all metals → high driving force for electrochemical reactions → more energy per reaction. |
| Lightest metal (Z=3) | Atomic mass of just 6.94 g/mol. Being so light means you get maximum energy per gram — high specific energy (energy/weight). Critical for portable devices and EVs where weight matters. |
| Small ion size | Li⁺ ions are tiny — they can intercalate (fit between) layers of graphite and metal oxide crystalline structures without breaking them. Enables reversible charge/discharge cycles. |
| High current delivery | Li-ion cells can deliver large amounts of current for high-power applications — critical for EV acceleration, power tools, and aerospace systems. |
- (a) Only one
- (b) Only two
- (c) Only three ✓ Correct
- (d) All the four
| Limitation | Details | Current Solutions |
|---|---|---|
| Thermal runaway (highly inflammable) | Li-ion batteries can overheat at high voltages → insulation failure → thermal runaway → fire or explosion. Electrolyte is flammable organic solvent. EV fires are difficult to extinguish. | Battery Management Systems (BMS) — monitor temperature, voltage, current. Solid-state electrolytes (non-flammable). LiFePO₄ chemistry (more thermally stable). Better separator materials. |
| Ageing / Short shelf life | Li-ion batteries degrade with age and cycles — capacity fades even when not used. Most fail noticeably after 2–3 years / 500–1000 cycles. Calendar ageing (time) + cycle ageing (charging/discharging). A 3-year-old EV battery may have 20% less range. | Better electrolyte additives. Partial charging (keep at 20–80% state of charge). Lower charge/discharge rates. Second-life batteries in grid storage after EV use. |
| Performance constraints (weight & safety systems) | Safety mechanisms (BMS, pressure relief vents, cooling systems) add weight and cost. High voltages require more safety overhead. Performance degrades at extreme temperatures (cold reduces capacity significantly). | Better thermal management systems. Solid-state batteries (eliminate liquid electrolyte). Silicon anodes (higher capacity → lighter batteries for same energy). |
| Import dependence / High cost | ~40% more expensive than Ni-Cd. Lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite — all concentrated in few countries. India imports nearly all lithium — from Australia, Chile, Argentina. Cobalt mainly from DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo) — conflict mineral. Supply chain vulnerability. | India's Lithium Triangle MoUs. Critical Mineral Mission. Lithium deposits found in Jammu & Kashmir (Reasi — 5.9 million tonnes, 2023). Sodium-ion batteries (no lithium needed). Battery recycling industry. |
| Recycling challenges | Used Li-ion batteries contain cobalt, lithium, nickel — valuable but hazardous if not handled properly. India lacks large-scale battery recycling infrastructure. Improper disposal → soil and water contamination. | Battery recycling policy (India). Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR). Urban mining — extracting metals from old batteries. Growing domestic recycling startups (Attero, Lohum). |
| Mineral | Role in Li-ion Battery | Top Producers | India Situation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lithium (Li) | The key active material — carries charge as Li⁺ ions. Present in both cathode (lithium metal oxide) and electrolyte (lithium salt). | Australia (#1), Chile (#2), Argentina (#3) — the "Lithium Triangle" (South America). Also China. | India found 5.9 million tonnes reserves in Reasi district, J&K (2023). Also in Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh. KABIL signed MoUs with Argentina, Chile, Australia. High Yield CA |
| Cobalt (Co) | Cathode material (LiCoO₂, NMC). Improves energy density and stability. Being reduced in newer battery chemistries (NMC811 has less Co; LFP has none). | Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) — ~70% of global supply. Also Russia, Australia. | No significant domestic deposits. Heavily import-dependent. DRC cobalt linked to child labour concerns — ethical supply chains critical. |
| Nickel (Ni) | Cathode material in high-energy-density batteries (NMC, NCA). Higher nickel → higher energy density but less stability. Trend: increasing nickel, decreasing cobalt. | Indonesia (#1), Philippines, Russia. Also Canada, Australia. | India has some laterite nickel deposits (Orissa) — limited. Primarily imported. |
| Manganese (Mn) | Cathode material in LiMn₂O₄ (LMO) and NMC batteries. Cheaper than cobalt. Improves thermal stability. Sodium-ion batteries increasingly use Mn. | South Africa, Australia, China, Gabon. | India has significant manganese deposits (Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra). Some potential for reduced import dependence. |
| Graphite (C) | Anode material — Li⁺ ions intercalate between graphite layers. "Natural graphite" from mining; "synthetic graphite" from petroleum coke. Critical for anode. | China dominates — ~80% of global graphite production AND processing. Also Brazil, Madagascar. | India has graphite deposits (Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Jharkhand) — largely unexploited. Heavily China-dependent for processed graphite currently. |
Sodium-ion batteries: Use sodium instead of lithium — sodium abundant (no supply risk), cheaper, but lower energy density. Suitable for stationary storage.
Silicon anodes: 10× capacity of graphite but expansion issues during charge/discharge.
| Initiative | Details | UPSC Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| PLI for ACC Battery Storage | Production-Linked Incentive scheme for Advanced Chemistry Cell (ACC) batteries. ₹18,100 crore outlay. Target: 50 GWh domestic battery manufacturing capacity. Attract global battery makers to produce in India (Ola Electric, Rajesh Exports, Reliance). | GS-III Economy + Technology. Make in India for batteries. Reduce import dependence on China for cells. |
| FAME II Scheme | Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of (Hybrid and) Electric Vehicles — Phase II. Subsidy for EVs, charging infrastructure. Targets: 7,000 e-buses, 5 lakh 3-wheelers, 55,000 4-wheelers, 10 lakh 2-wheelers. CA | EV adoption policy. Li-ion batteries core of all these EVs. |
| KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd) | Joint venture of NALCO, HCL, MECL — to acquire overseas critical mineral assets. Signed MoUs with Argentina and Chile for lithium. Exploring Australia. Goal: secure India's supply of lithium, cobalt, nickel. High Yield CA | Critical minerals geopolitics. Resource security like India's oil diplomacy. |
| Critical Mineral Mission | Launched 2024. Targets 30 critical minerals including lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, manganese, titanium. Both domestic exploration AND overseas acquisition. CA | Policy framework for mineral security. Links to battery technology, EVs, clean energy. |
| Lithium discovery in J&K (2023) | Geological Survey of India (GSI) identified 5.9 million tonnes of lithium reserves in Reasi district, Jammu & Kashmir — India's first major domestic lithium discovery. Could transform India's battery supply chain. High Yield CA | One of most important current affairs. Links critical minerals, J&K development, EV policy. |
| Battery waste management rules | India notified Battery Waste Management Rules 2022. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for battery manufacturers. Targets for battery collection and recycling. Prevents hazardous disposal. | Environment + governance angle. Circular economy for critical minerals. |
| National Electric Mobility Mission | Targets 30% EV penetration by 2030 (NITI Aayog). All Li-ion battery-powered. Requires massive domestic battery manufacturing scale-up. | Links EV policy with battery technology and critical minerals. |
→ PLI for ACC batteries: ₹18,100 crore, target 50 GWh capacity
→ FAME II: subsidies for EVs — 2-wheelers, 3-wheelers, buses, cars
→ KABIL MoUs: Argentina + Chile (lithium), Australia (various critical minerals)
→ Battery Waste Rules 2022: EPR for battery manufacturers
→ India's battery import bill: ~$2 billion/year — target to reduce through domestic manufacturing
Critical Mineral Mission (2024): India launched mission covering 30 critical minerals. Domestic exploration + overseas acquisition (KABIL). Part of India's resource security strategy. CA
PLI for ACC batteries: Multiple winners manufacturing locally — Ola Electric (India's first 4680-type cell), Reliance (partnership with global firms), Rajesh Exports. India targeting battery manufacturing hub status. CA
INS Vagsheer (submarine) commissioned (2024): P75 India submarine — Li-ion battery-equipped, improving underwater endurance vs older lead-acid submarines. Strategic significance for Indian Navy. CA
EV fire incidents & policy response: Ola, Okinawa, Pure EV scooter fires (2022–23) led to new AIS 156 safety standard for EV batteries in India — cell-level testing, thermal propagation prevention mandatory. CA
Sodium-ion batteries going commercial (2023–24): BYD (China), CATL launching sodium-ion EVs. No lithium needed — reduces supply chain risk. Lower energy density but much cheaper. India: Faradion, Krypton Energy developing Na-ion. CA
IEA Critical Minerals Report 2024: Demand for lithium to grow 40× by 2040 (net zero scenario). Cobalt 20–25×. Warns of supply bottlenecks. DRC cobalt mining reform needed. CA
US Inflation Reduction Act — battery manufacturing: $7,500 EV tax credit if battery minerals from US-aligned countries (not China). Reshaping global battery supply chains — India benefits as US ally.
China battery dominance: CATL and BYD together control 50%+ of global Li-ion cell production. China controls 60%+ of Li-ion cell manufacturing and processing of most critical minerals. Strategic challenge for India and Western nations.
- (a) Lithium ions move from cathode to anode through the external circuit; electrons move through the electrolyte
- (b) Lithium ions move from anode to cathode through the electrolyte; electrons flow from anode to cathode through the external circuit (creating current)
- (c) Lithium ions move from anode to cathode through the external circuit; electrons move through the electrolyte
- (d) Both lithium ions and electrons move from cathode to anode during discharging
- (a) Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, and Ernest Rutherford
- (b) John B. Goodenough, Akira Yoshino, and Elon Musk
- (c) M. Stanley Whittingham, John B. Goodenough, and Akira Yoshino
- (d) John B. Goodenough, Akira Yoshino, and James Dyson
- (a) Reasi district, Jammu & Kashmir — approximately 5.9 million tonnes
- (b) Bikaner district, Rajasthan — approximately 2.1 million tonnes
- (c) Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh — approximately 3.5 million tonnes
- (d) Koraput district, Odisha — approximately 1.8 million tonnes
- (a) The separator conducts electrons between the cathode and anode, creating the electric current
- (b) The separator is made of lithium metal oxide and stores lithium ions during charging
- (c) The separator is a microporous membrane that physically separates the anode and cathode while allowing lithium ions to pass through its tiny pores
- (d) The separator acts as the electrolyte, dissolving lithium salts to allow ion conduction
- (a) The gradual loss of battery capacity due to repeated charging and discharging cycles over time
- (b) A self-amplifying cascade of reactions where battery overheating causes electrolyte decomposition, releasing flammable gases that can ignite — potentially leading to fire or explosion
- (c) The memory effect where a battery "remembers" a reduced capacity after partial charging cycles
- (d) The phenomenon where a battery's performance degrades rapidly in cold temperatures below 0°C
- (a) Lithium is the cheapest and most abundant metal on Earth
- (b) Lithium is chemically inert and does not react with electrolytes, making batteries very safe
- (c) Lithium has the highest melting point of all metals, allowing batteries to operate at extreme temperatures
- (d) Lithium is the lightest metal AND the most electropositive element — giving maximum energy output per gram, and its small ion size allows intercalation in electrode materials
- (a) ONGC, Coal India, and Steel Authority of India (SAIL)
- (b) NTPC, Indian Oil Corporation, and Bharat Petroleum
- (c) NALCO (National Aluminium Company), HCL (Hindustan Copper Limited), and MECL (Mineral Exploration and Consultancy Limited)
- (d) SAIL, NMDC, and Manganese Ore India Limited (MOIL)
| Topic | Key Facts for UPSC |
|---|---|
| Definition | Rechargeable battery using lithium ions as charge carrier. High energy density, fast charge, long cycle life, no memory effect. |
| Nobel Prize 2019 | Chemistry Nobel — M. Stanley Whittingham + John B. Goodenough + Akira Yoshino. For developing modern Li-ion battery. |
| Structure | Cathode (+): Lithium metal oxide (LiCoO₂, LiMn₂O₄, LiFePO₄, NMC). Anode (−): Graphite. Electrolyte: Lithium salt in solvent (conducts Li⁺, not e⁻). Separator: Microporous polymer (allows Li⁺, blocks e⁻, prevents short circuit). |
| Working — Discharge | Anode: LiC₆ → C₆ + Li⁺ + e⁻ (oxidation). Li⁺ moves anode → cathode through electrolyte. e⁻ move through external circuit (= electricity). Cathode: CoO₂ + Li⁺ + e⁻ → LiCoO₂ (reduction). |
| Working — Charge | Everything reverses. External power forces Li⁺ from cathode → anode. Li⁺ intercalate back into graphite. Energy stored. |
| Why Lithium? | Lightest metal (6.94 g/mol). Most electropositive element — maximum energy per gram. High cell voltage (3.6V — 3× Ni-Cd). Small Li⁺ size allows intercalation. |
| Advantages | High charge density; compact design; low self-discharge (~2%/month); no memory effect; no toxic cadmium; reusable 500–2000 cycles; enables renewable energy storage and EVs. |
| Applications | Smartphones/laptops (most common); EVs (Tesla, Tata Nexon); Aerospace (Boeing 787); Submarines (enhanced stealth); Medical (pacemakers); Grid storage (BESS). |
| Disadvantages | Thermal runaway (fire risk); ageing/capacity fade; heavy safety systems; 40% costlier than Ni-Cd; critical minerals import dependence; recycling challenges. |
| Critical Minerals | Lithium (Lithium Triangle — Chile, Argentina, Bolivia; also Australia). Cobalt (DRC — 70%). Nickel (Indonesia). Graphite (China — 80%). Manganese (South Africa). All critical for cathode/anode. |
| India Lithium Discovery | GSI found 5.9 million tonnes in Reasi district, J&K (Feb 2023) — India's first major domestic deposit. Game-changer for India's EV ambitions. |
| KABIL | Khanij Bidesh India Ltd = NALCO + HCL + MECL (Ministry of Mines). Acquires critical mineral assets overseas. MoUs: Argentina + Chile (lithium), Australia. |
| India Policy | PLI for ACC batteries (₹18,100 crore, 50 GWh target). FAME II (EV subsidies). Critical Mineral Mission (2024, 30 minerals). Battery Waste Rules 2022 (EPR). AIS 156 safety standard for EVs. |
| Next-gen batteries | Solid-state (no flammable electrolyte; Toyota 2027–28). Sodium-ion (no lithium; BYD, CATL launching). Silicon anodes (10× graphite capacity). All aim to fix Li-ion limitations. |
| PYQ Key Fact | Cathode materials: Cobalt + Lithium + Nickel (3 out of 4 — Graphite is ANODE material, NOT cathode). Fuel cell produces DC not AC (same principle — electrochemical cells always produce DC). |
Trap 1 — "Graphite is a cathode material in Li-ion batteries" → WRONG! Graphite is the ANODE (negative electrode) material. The cathode (positive electrode) is made of lithium metal oxides (LiCoO₂, LiFePO₄, NMC etc.). This was directly tested in the UPSC PYQ on EV batteries where 4 elements (Cobalt, Graphite, Lithium, Nickel) were given — Graphite is the ONLY anode material; the other 3 (Cobalt, Lithium, Nickel) are cathode materials. Answer was "Only three."
Trap 2 — "Lithium ions travel through the external circuit to create electricity" → WRONG! ELECTRONS travel through the external circuit to create electricity — NOT lithium ions. Lithium ions travel through the ELECTROLYTE (internal path, inside the battery). Electrons travel through the external circuit (wires, device, load). This is the entire design principle of the battery. If Li⁺ moved through the external circuit instead of e⁻, there would be no electrical current in the device.
Trap 3 — "Lithium-ion batteries have a memory effect like Ni-Cd batteries" → WRONG! Li-ion batteries have NO memory effect. The memory effect is a characteristic of Nickel-Cadmium (Ni-Cd) batteries — where repeated partial discharge before recharging causes the battery to "remember" a lower usable capacity. This is one of the KEY ADVANTAGES of Li-ion over Ni-Cd: you can charge a Li-ion at any state of charge without degradation. You don't need to fully discharge before charging.
Trap 4 — "During CHARGING, lithium ions move from anode to cathode" → WRONG! During CHARGING, lithium ions move from CATHODE → ANODE (the reverse of discharge). During DISCHARGING, Li⁺ moves ANODE → CATHODE. Remember: Charging = Li⁺ goes "upstream" (cathode to anode) forced by external power. Discharging = Li⁺ flows "downstream" (anode to cathode) spontaneously powering the device.
Trap 5 — "KABIL is a joint venture of ONGC, Indian Oil, and Coal India" → WRONG! KABIL = NALCO + HCL + MECL (all under Ministry of Mines — mining/minerals companies). ONGC and Indian Oil are petroleum companies (Ministry of Petroleum). Coal India is a coal company. KABIL specifically acquires CRITICAL MINERALS (lithium, cobalt, nickel) — entirely different from oil/coal. The confusion arises because India has different "overseas acquisition" entities for different resources.


