Dave Borlace cuts through the hype cycle surrounding next-generation energy storage with a counterintuitive thesis: the limitations of sodium-ion batteries were never about the chemistry itself, but about the engineering around it. While market analysts have long dismissed sodium as a "poor man's alternative" suitable only for stationary storage, Borlace argues that recent breakthroughs in electrode architecture have shattered the assumption that sodium cannot compete in high-performance mobility. This is not a story about a new element, but about finally solving the traffic jams that have long plagued ion movement.
The Engineering Bottleneck
Borlace challenges the conventional wisdom that sodium ions are simply too large and slow to match lithium. "Sodium is a bigger atom than lithium. It's heavier than lithium and its ions move more slowly across conventional electrolytes," he notes, setting up the standard narrative only to dismantle it. He points out that for decades, the industry blamed the element's intrinsic properties for poor performance, ignoring the environment the ions were forced to navigate. "What really limits how fast a battery charges or discharges isn't just down to the dynamics of the ions themselves. It's the entire environment those ions are forced to move through."
This reframing is crucial. By shifting the blame from the atom to the electrode design, Borlace highlights how recent research has turned a perceived weakness into a manageable engineering challenge. He cites a December 2025 study from the Tokyo University of Science that utilized a "diluted electrode method," spacing hard carbon particles far apart within an inert matrix to eliminate ion starvation. The result, as Borlace observes, is that "sodium insertion or sodiation rate in this amended hard carbon substrate is higher than lithium insertion or lithation into the same material." This finding suggests that the historical performance gap was an artifact of poor design rather than a fundamental law of physics.
"The problem so far has been that the way electrodes are built and flooded with electrolytes has been the limiting factor. Once that's fixed, sodium behaves far better than most people expected."
Critics might argue that lab-scale breakthroughs often fail to scale to mass production, where cost and consistency become the primary hurdles. However, the fact that major manufacturers are already moving forward suggests these engineering solutions are robust enough for industrial application.
Solving the First-Cycle Efficiency Problem
Beyond ion mobility, Borlace addresses the critical issue of energy loss during the battery's first charge. Hard carbon, the standard anode for sodium batteries, suffers from electrolyte decomposition within its nanopores, a problem that is far less prevalent in the dense graphite used for lithium. Borlace explains that "solvent molecules decompose. Side reactions consume charge, useful empty spaces get filled up and the crucial first cycle efficiency can collapse."
To combat this, he highlights a second study from the Federal Institute of Materials Research and Testing in Germany, which introduced a thin layer of activated carbon around the hard carbon. This acts as a molecular filter, allowing sodium ions to pass while blocking bulky solvent molecules. The outcome was dramatic: "First cycle efficiency jumped dramatically, usable cell capacity increased, and battery performance started to look much more like what the intrinsic physics of sodium predicted." This parallels the historical evolution of lithium-ion technology, where early struggles with intercalation into graphite were solved not by changing the lithium, but by refining the electrode structure to accommodate it.
The implication is clear: the "wonky" engineering of the past is being replaced by precision architecture. "It's not magic. It's just a bit of lateral thinking to get all the electrochemical ducks lined up," Borlace writes. This approach validates the strategy of China's battery giants, CATL and BYD, who are now fast-tracking sodium-ion cells for passenger vehicles. Their pivot is not merely a reaction to volatile lithium prices, but a recognition that the technology has crossed a threshold from "interesting to useful."
Market Realities and Strategic Shifts
The commercial momentum behind sodium-ion is accelerating as the administration and global stakeholders grapple with the geopolitical awkwardness of the lithium supply chain. Borlace notes that "CATL's sodium ion cells are reportedly already crossing the metaphorical Rubicon into passenger vehicles," signaling a move away from niche applications. This is particularly relevant given that sodium offers distinct advantages in cold climates and cost-sensitive sectors, areas where lithium-ion has historically struggled.
However, the author remains grounded in realism. "Sodium ion chemistry will never challenge lithium ion in high energy density mobility applications like cars and trucks," he initially posits, before correcting himself to say that while it may not replace lithium entirely, it will "carve out a space where most analysts said it could never compete." This nuanced view avoids the trap of predicting a total replacement, instead positioning sodium as a vital complement in a diversified energy portfolio.
"We might not need a bunch of spangly new technologies to make the energy transition work. We've almost certainly got everything we need already. We just need to apply a bit of lateral thinking... and get on with the task of optimizing for performance."
This perspective serves as a corrective to the industry's obsession with "moon dust and unicorn tears" technologies like solid-state batteries or fusion, which Borlace rightly characterizes as distant mirages. The immediate path forward lies in optimizing existing chemistries. As he concludes, "Everyone assumes they're limited by the material when in many cases we just haven't worked out how to properly engineer the system around it yet."
Bottom Line
Borlace's strongest argument is the shift from material determinism to engineering optimization, supported by concrete recent research that proves sodium can match lithium's speed when the electrode architecture is corrected. The piece's greatest vulnerability is the assumption that these lab-scale solutions will translate seamlessly to mass-market manufacturing without significant cost or yield penalties. Readers should watch for the next 12 to 24 months as CATL and BYD deploy these cells in real-world vehicles to see if the engineering gains hold up at scale.