Author Topic: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost  (Read 1009 times)

Richard230

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Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« on: November 20, 2014, 12:48:48 PM »
That is what is claimed we will have by 2017, according to an article titled “Berkeley team aims to give batteries a boost”, written by Jeremy Thomas (bayareanewsgroup.com).  It seems that the DOE is funding a $120 million program to develop new battery technology at a new facility called the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research.  This is a 14-member partnership led by Argonne National Laboratory, including Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratory and a number of other universities and private companies.  In January, the Center's Berkeley hub is moving into the lab's new General Purpose Laboratory, bringing its battery scientists, chemists and engineers under one roof for the first time.

The team, headed by JCESR deputy director Venkat Srinivasan, aims to achieve revolutionary advances in battery performance, creating batteries with up to five times the energy capacity of current batteries at one-fifth the cost by 2017.  Their plan is to replace lithium batteries with batteries made of cheaper, more durable materials, such as magnesium, aluminum and calcium.

Nearly two years into the project the researchers have narrowed down a list of 100 types of “beyond lithium” battery designs to a handful of promising concepts that are already in the prototype phase.

JCESR's principal investigator, Brett Helms is focusing his research on “flow” batteries that stores energy in a liquid solution of electrolytes that can be pumped through a membrane, generating power when they circulate and react with electrodes.  Helms wants to use materials such as sulfur to create a battery with five to 10 times more energy than current flow batteries.  He plans to have a working prototype of this battery design by the end of the 5-year initiative.  The technology, says Helms, could be used to power electric vehicles someday.

The article mentions that adjacent to the Advanced Light Source building, Toyota has been researching Magnesium-ion batteries.

Using high-power computers, Srinivasan's team has whittled down the number of materials to a few that have sufficient energy capacity, are safe, cheaper and longer-lasting than lithium designs. Within the next year, Srinivasan hopes to have new materials ready for testing and prototypes ready by 2017.
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flar

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Re: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« Reply #1 on: November 20, 2014, 01:43:58 PM »
Hopes to... plans to... aims to... wants to...

...have prototypes...

Sigh.  It's like every other article on the next big battery technology...  :(
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Richard230

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Re: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« Reply #2 on: November 20, 2014, 05:52:14 PM »
Hopes to... plans to... aims to... wants to...

...have prototypes...

Sigh.  It's like every other article on the next big battery technology...  :(

My thoughts exactly.  Except this time we have the government funding the project to the tune of $120 million.  It sounded to me like everyone was jumping on this bandwagon due to the free funding available.   ::)

Maybe Toyota's project will pan out and go into production some day. 
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00049 (AKA SopFu)

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Re: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« Reply #3 on: November 20, 2014, 06:58:48 PM »
Hey now, I work about 1000 feet from JCESR's current main office, and will be able to throw a stone from my cube and hit their new building once it's built :)

It shouldn't be any surprise that the Government funds very basic research in batteries. Argonne's Li-Ion patent was issued about 10 years before the battery ever hit a commercial product. The stuff JCESR is working on today will be similar. The whole premise is getting away from Li-Ion, but everything any automaker or consumer electronics manufacturer is making now is only based on Li-Ion. They hope to have lab-scale prototypes running in 5 years from the date of award two years ago, but then figure another 10 before any of the technology is commercialized.

In other words, JCESR is not doing any research in Li-Ion at all, although Argonne is still improving on their existing Li-Ion technology outside of the JCESR funding.

JCESR has already shelved Li-air as being too complicated for the performance, so now I'm pinning for Magnesium. The multivalent stuff is promising. The idea of pulling two or more electrons from every atom instead of one means double or more energy capacity from the same number of atoms.

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skuzzle

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Re: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« Reply #4 on: November 21, 2014, 03:09:40 AM »
Hopes to... plans to... aims to... wants to...

...have prototypes...

Sigh.  It's like every other article on the next big battery technology...  :(

My thoughts exactly.  Except this time we have the government funding the project to the tune of $120 million.  It sounded to me like everyone was jumping on this bandwagon due to the free funding available.   ::)

Maybe Toyota's project will pan out and go into production some day.

Hopefully the government investment will work out better than the $263 million spent on battery maker A123.

protomech

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Re: Batteries: 5 X the energy & 1/5 the cost
« Reply #5 on: November 21, 2014, 12:20:49 PM »
Lithium will be with us for a while. Fortunately, while it'd always be nice to see newer tech reach market, what we have is "good enough" for a great many applications.
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