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Essential Lab Equipment for Lithium-Ion Battery Research: 2025 Complete Checklist

Canrud June 30, 2026 24

Introduction

Setting up a battery research lab from scratch — or expanding an existing materials lab into battery work — requires careful planning. The wrong equipment selection wastes budget; the right selection accelerates research quality and publication output.

This checklist covers everything from the inert atmosphere foundation (glove box) through electrochemical testing and materials characterization. Each item is categorized by priority: Tier 1 (Essential — must have before first experiment), Tier 2 (Important — needed for full research program), and Tier 3 (Advanced — for specialized or high-throughput work).

Approximate US price ranges are included as of 2025.

 

Tier 1: Essential Equipment (Day 1 Needs)

 

1. Glove Box (Inert Atmosphere Enclosure)

 

Purpose: Argon or nitrogen atmosphere for lithium metal handling, electrolyte preparation, and cell assembly.

 

Minimum specs for battery R&D: 

  • O₂ and H₂O < 0.1 ppm (active purification with regeneration)
  • Two antechambers (one large for equipment, one small for samples)
  • Positive pressure control (1–5 mbar)
  • Integrated O₂ and H₂O sensors with continuous monitoring

 

US Suppliers and Approximate Pricing: 

Supplier

Model

Price Range

MBraun (Stratham, NH)

Unilab / LabStar

$35,000–$80,000

Vigor Gas Purification

SG series

$20,000–$45,000

Inert Technology (Amesbury, MA)

IL-series

$25,000–$55,000

MTI Corporation

EQ-VGB

$15,000–$30,000



Note: Budget for annual maintenance contracts ($2,000–$5,000/year) and argon gas supply.

 

2. Vacuum Oven

 

Purpose: Drying electrode materials, active materials, and separators to < 10 ppm residual moisture before glove box entry.

 

Minimum specs: 

  • Temperature range: room temperature to 200°C
  • Vacuum capability: < 100 mTorr (< 0.1 mmHg)
  • Shelf volume: ≥ 20L for standard lab needs
  • Programmable temperature controller

 

US Suppliers: 

Supplier

Model

Price Range

Thermo Scientific

Vacutherm

$3,500–$7,000

VWR

VWR 1410 series

$2,000–$4,000

MTI Corporation

DZF-6020

$800–$1,500

Across International

AI series

$600–$2,000



3. Coin Cell Crimper

 

Purpose: Sealing coin cell cases (CR2032, CR2016) at precise, reproducible pressure.

 

Minimum specs: 

  • Compatible with CR2032 and CR2016
  • Hydraulic or electric actuation (more reproducible than manual lever)
  • Adjustable pressure (target: 750–900 psi / ~1,000 N)
  • Compact enough to fit inside glove box antechamber or on glove box shelf

 

US Suppliers: 

Supplier

Model

Price Range

MTI Corporation

MSK-110 (hydraulic)

$400–$900

Pred Materials

EQ-MSK crimper

$350–$700

MSE Supplies

Electric crimper

$500–$1,200

EL-CELL (Germany, US dist.)

ECC-Press

$3,000–$5,000



4. Battery Cycler / Analyzer

Purpose: Electrochemical characterization — cycling, rate capability testing, capacity measurement.

 

Minimum specs: 

  • Voltage range: 0–5 V (for most Li-ion chemistries)
  • Current range: ≥ 10 mA per channel (up to 1 A preferred)
  • ≥ 8 channels (16–32 channels for active labs)
  • CCCV (constant current / constant voltage) cycling
  • Software for data logging, protocol scripting, and export

 

US Suppliers: 

Supplier

Model

Channels

Price Range

Neware Technology

BTS4000 (US distributor)

8–32

$3,000–$15,000

Arbin Instruments (TX)

BT-2000 series

8–128

$10,000–$60,000

MACCOR (Tulsa, OK)

Series 4000

4–32

$15,000–$50,000

Gamry Instruments (PA)

Interface 5000E

1 (potentiostat)

$6,000–$10,000

Bio-Logic (US office)

VMP-3e

1–16

$8,000–$40,000



Note: Arbin and MACCOR are US-headquartered companies with US support teams — important for national lab and DOE-funded researchers with procurement restrictions.

 

5. Analytical Balance

 

Purpose: Accurate weighing of electrode materials, active mass, and electrolyte volumes for mass loading calculations.

 

Minimum specs: 

  • Resolution: 0.01 mg (10 µg) — required for coin cell-scale mass measurements
  • Capacity: ≥ 100 g
  • Calibration weight set included
  • Preferred: anti-vibration table or draft shield for lab environments

 

US Suppliers: Mettler-Toledo XPE analytical balance ($2,500–$5,000), Sartorius Cubis II ($1,500–$4,000), Ohaus ($800–$2,000)

 

6. Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) Workstation

 

Purpose: Characterizing battery internal resistance, SEI layer formation, charge transfer resistance, and diffusion processes.

Minimum specs: 

  • Frequency range: 100 kHz to 10 mHz (1 MHz to 1 mHz preferred)
  • Voltage amplitude: 5–10 mV (perturbation)
  • Compatible with coin cell hardware (alligator clips or dedicated coin cell holder)
  • Software with Nyquist/Bode plotting and equivalent circuit fitting (Zfit, ZView, or built-in)

US Suppliers: Gamry Interface 1010E ($3,000–$6,000), Bio-Logic SP-200 ($5,000–$12,000), Autolab PGSTAT302N ($8,000–$18,000)

Tip: Many labs use a combined potentiostat/EIS unit (e.g., Gamry Interface 1010E) that handles both CV, LSV, and EIS — eliminating the need for separate instruments in budget-constrained labs.

 

Tier 2: Important Equipment (Within First 6 Months)

7. Automatic Thin-Film Coater

 

Purpose: More reproducible electrode coating than manual doctor blade; essential for systematic studies.

 

Key specs: Adjustable blade speed (1–100 mm/s), programmable blade gap (50–500 µm), temperature-controlled substrate plate (optional).

 

Pricing: MTI MSK-AFA-III (compact, $3,000–$6,000); BYK-Gardner Byko-Drive (research grade, $8,000–$15,000); Hohsen automatic coater ($10,000–$20,000)



8. Planetary Mixer / SpeedMixer

 

Purpose: High-quality slurry preparation — faster and more uniform than magnetic stirring.

 

SpeedMixer (preferred for small batches): Flacktek SpeedMixer DAC 150 FVZ ($3,000–$6,000) — US-made, excellent for 1–50 g batches, no contamination from mixing media.

 

Planetary ball mixer (for larger batches): MTI SFM-series ($1,500–$5,000)



9. Calendering / Roll Press

 

Purpose: Densifying electrodes after drying to target porosity and improve electronic contact.

 

Lab-scale options: 

  • Manual two-roll mill: $1,500–$5,000
  • Motorized precision roll press (MTI MSK-HRP): $5,000–$15,000
  • Hydraulic hot-press (for solid-state electrode densification): $10,000–$30,000

 

10. Glove Box Vacuum Oven (Inside Glove Box)

 

Purpose: Final drying and annealing of samples inside the inert atmosphere — for air-sensitive materials that cannot be transferred through the antechamber after drying.

 

Pricing: $800–$3,000 for a compact model (MTI, Across International)



11. Micropipette Set and Calibrated Dispensing

 

Purpose: Reproducible electrolyte volume addition during cell assembly.

 

Required range: 10–100 µL and 100–1000 µL.

 

Suppliers: Eppendorf Research Plus, Rainin Pipet-Lite XLS+ (US-preferred brands for accuracy)

Pricing: $200–$600 per pipette; buy calibrated models only



12. Coin Cell Hardware Punch Set

 

Purpose: Punching electrode and separator discs to precise diameters.

 

Essential punch sizes: 14 mm, 15 mm, 15.6 mm, 15.8 mm, 16 mm (and corresponding for anode)

 

Suppliers: MTI Corporation, Pred Materials (under $200 per set)



Tier 3: Advanced / Specialized Equipment

13. Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) + EDX

 

Purpose: Electrode surface morphology, particle size, coating thickness, failure analysis.

Cost: $80,000–$400,000 new (many universities have shared SEM facilities)

 

14. X-Ray Diffraction (XRD)

 

Purpose: Crystal structure, phase identification, state of charge determination.

Cost: $100,000–$300,000 new (Bruker D8, Rigaku SmartLab common in US labs)

 

15. BET Surface Area Analyzer

 

Purpose: Measuring specific surface area and pore size distribution of active materials.

Cost: $25,000–$80,000 (Micromeritics, Quantachrome, Anton Paar)

 

16. Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA)

 

Purpose: Measuring carbon content, moisture content, and decomposition temperature of electrode materials.

Cost: $30,000–$80,000 (TA Instruments, Mettler-Toledo)

 

17. High-Precision Coin Cell Crimper (EL-CELL or Hohsen)

 

Purpose: Higher crimping precision for publication-quality reproducibility studies.

Cost: $3,000–$6,000

 

18. In-Situ / Operando XRD or Raman

 

Purpose: Real-time structural characterization during electrochemical cycling.

Cost: Requires significant infrastructure; typically shared facility access

 

Total Budget Estimates by Lab Scale

 

Lab Type

Tier 1 Only

Tier 1 + 2

Full (T1+T2+T3)

Student/pilot lab

$60,000–$100,000

$100,000–$175,000

$300,000–$600,000

Mid-scale research lab

$80,000–$130,000

$150,000–$250,000

$500,000–$1,000,000+

National lab / industry pilot

$150,000–$300,000

$300,000–$600,000

$1,000,000–$5,000,000+

 

Frequently Asked Questions 

Q: What is the minimum equipment needed to start battery research?  

A: The absolute minimum to start lithium-ion coin cell research is: (1) an argon or nitrogen glove box, (2) a vacuum oven, (3) a coin cell crimper, (4) a battery cycler/analyzer, and (5) an analytical balance. This Tier 1 setup can be assembled for $60,000–$100,000 in the US in 2025.

 

Q: What battery cycler is used in academic battery research?  

A: The most common battery cyclers in US academic battery labs are Neware BTS4000 (cost-effective, widely used globally), Arbin BT-2000 (US-made, strong DOE/national lab presence), and MACCOR Series 4000 (US-made, high-accuracy). Bio-Logic and Gamry instruments are preferred when combined EIS capability is needed.

 

Q: Do I need an EIS system for battery research?  

A: EIS (electrochemical impedance spectroscopy) is strongly recommended. It provides critical information about cell internal resistance, SEI layer formation, charge transfer kinetics, and diffusion behavior that cycling data alone cannot reveal. Most potentiostat suppliers (Gamry, Bio-Logic, Autolab) offer combined cycling + EIS instruments.

 

Q: What analytical balance is needed for battery research?  

A: Battery research requires an analytical balance with at least 0.01 mg (10 µg) resolution. This precision is necessary for accurately measuring electrode mass loading on coin cell-scale electrode discs (5–30 mg total mass). Standard 0.1 mg resolution balances are not sufficient.

 

Q: Can I use water instead of NMP for electrode slurry to avoid the need for ventilated hoods?  

A: Yes. Graphite and silicon-based anode slurries are routinely prepared using water-based binders (CMC/SBR or PAA in deionized water) without NMP. For cathodes, water-based processing is more challenging (NMC/LCO react with water) but is an active area of research, particularly for LFP cathodes with water-compatible binder systems.