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When you think of electric cars, you generally mean two
terms in which they exist: autonomy vs charging infrastructure. These two words
compete with each other to a certain point, because higher autonomy means less
infrastructure needed, hence faster adoption by the market.
24M, a company that has spun out of A123 Systems, an electric
vehicle battery manufacturer, will start to develop a new type of battery that
would cut the costs of energy storage by 85 percent. That’s a lot, if you take
into consideration that only the battery pack of an EV is more than $10,000. Having received $6 million from ARPA-E and $10 million from
venture-capital funding, 24M (whose name stands for “24 molar”) is working with
Rutgers University and MIT. Yet-Ming Chiang, the
materials professor from MIT, who also founded A123 Systems, is behind the
wheel and doesn’t yet reveal any in-depth technical details about the new
battery.
All we know is that the battery uses a “semisolid” energy
storage material and combines the best in conventional batteries, fuel cells
and flow batteries. For example, solid batteries are heavy, fuel cells need
smart and expensive containers and complex recharging infrastructure, and flow
batteries (in which electrolyte flows past a membrane, just like in fuel cells)
are toxic, corrosive and have low energy density.
Chiang says that his new batteries will have the energy
density of lithium ion-based ones, and can store lots of energy without
complicated supporting materials to extract it. “The final version of the
device will look very different from both a conventional battery and a flow
battery,” he says.
Work still has to be done to take the new batteries to the
market, and for the moment Chiang only has a prototype device, which he used to
get the ARPA-E funding. He also estimates that the team will need about five
years before anything is sold to the public.
From my experience, there’s a lot less time needed for
commercialization once someone with large pockets starts investing in any
technology. It was the case for many inventions up to now and I don’t see why
this should be different.
greenoptimistic.com
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