Company in Spain is touting a graphene battery with amazing (impossible?) claims.
http://futurism.com/scientists-develop-better-battery-thanks-graphene/
http://futurism.com/scientists-develop-better-battery-thanks-graphene/
That says it all. Stil a bunchj of morons chasing that fairy tail.The guys who are doing it, previously worked in a algae biofuel scam.
Actually, we can expect at least one doubling (perhaps better) within about 5 years. Cathodes are the weak point of current LiIon chemistry, holding only about 20% of the energy their anode counterparts are capable of. When one of the cathodes in the labs becomes commercially available, expect a 2x, 3x, or even 4x jump in capability for the same price literally overnight.It will be evolution, not revolution in my opinion. Gains will be incremental- it's unlikely that someone will pop up with a totally new scheme that doubles the Wh/kg or Wh/L figures in a single leap like Watt accomplished with the external condenser on the steam engine. That kind of leap is possible but it's improbable.
For home use, check out Aquion in a couple of years. Their batteries consist of water, carbon, and salt in a plastic container and should work for 10,000 cycles or more. As they ramp up production, expecti their price to drop like everything else. Too heavy and bulky for EVs, though.Forgetting about home power reuse applications for the moment, the BEV's battery is basically scrap at the end of the BEV's life- so if I buy the BEV new and pay a lot for extra battery capacity I will never use, it's basically wasted money. I'll be bored of the car long before its battery wears out if I only use 30% DOD each time I use it.
Yes and no. The trend follows between 15% - 20% compounded (doubling value every 5-8 years) , but the actual changes look more like a stair step with improvements every couple of years.I see the 19% per year compounded for five years giving a doubling as being much more likely than a 4-5 fold increase in a single leap.
As is so often the case in business, their prices seem to reflect the current market more than their costs, which are reputed to be much lower. They are apparently charging about $250 per kilowatt-hour. I would expect this to drop as their production ramps up and as they face stiffer competition from other solutions.As to the Aquion thing: it looks very interesting. They seem to be selling units right now, which is a plus, but I have no idea what they're charging for them.
Seems to me they are pretty straightforward about their technology; although I would not expect them to detail every trick.It took a large amount of searching to find anything technical about what they're offering, and what I did read (in their Australian distributor's marketing literature) doesn't appear to relate exactly to what they're currently doing- it was more evolutionary/historical information related to similar chemistry.
Actually 85% for over 5,000 cycles, again from this article. Note that is just for the battery; electronics will also sap some efficiency. Other articles have suggested they will get far more than 5,000 cycles, perhaps at slightly reduced capacity. The 3,000 cycles from your .PDF is at 100% DOD - which I have a hard time imagining would be standard practice.Looks like they claim 80% round-trip efficiency, which would be more than adequate and might be achievable, but probably tough to do with an aqueous electrolyte.
You can't expect them to give away their trade secrets?There are no half reactions published for it, which is kind of sketchy, but it sounds like the chemistry is legitimately very complex- much more so than in a Li-ion cell. There's actually very little readily accessible literature on their chemistry anywhere outside of their promotional literature or "media reports" i.e. promotional literature regurgitated on some website.
I understand general pessimism. Read the articles on 24M's improvements in manufacturing (a plant can be built for under $100 million, rather than $10 billion for traditional battery plant); also see the various articles about improved cathodes, all of which anticipate costs roughly equivalent to current cathodes but, due to superior chemistry, promise anywhere between 2x-5x performance improvement from the same battery.I agree with Karter. If you think you're going to see a 5x reduction in price for EV batteries from where we are now, I'm very skeptical of that claim.
Yes - only a chemistry change can bring us multiples. 24M promises an incremental improvement by removing some of the "filler" from batteries, but once that trick is played we won't see that type of improvement again as most of the filler will already be gone.As to watt density, we're on a plateau and have been for quite a while.
Absolutely. There is a design for a flow battery using a chemical from the Ruhbarb plant that promises to provide the electrolyte for the battery (which comprises 90-99% of a flow battery's material) for $15/Kwh or something silly like that. That battery has a lower round-trip efficiency, something like 80% instead of 95%+ for LiIon, but could definitely have uses for major grid outages, for example.Batteries like the Aquion optimized for storage are another matter, and I can see huge potential improvements there.
That is exactly correct - the inspiration to search for "workable but possibly lower efficiency batteries based on component cost rather than energy density or power density" was the real innovation. Once they stopped looking for "better" in terms of chemistry and started looking for "better" based on cost, there was already a wealth of research out there to help them - they just had to read through it all and try a few.My comment about not finding references to chemistry similar to Aquion's elsewhere isn't an expectation that they'll dump their secrets out for public display- it's merely an observation that there doesn't seem to be a lot of work being done by others on the same or similar chemistry, at least not that can be found in ten minutes of searching.
Probably correct on the chemistry - but keep in mind that patents are based on processes, not chemistry, so they may in fact have assets which can be protected by patent.That tells me something, and the something it tells me ISN'T that they have such a secure patent position that nobody else is even bothering to pursue it.
Dead on, and they probably will. The question for them will be how broadly they can succeed in having their patent applied to others by judges.If it really were a super low cost, super stable chemistry, people in both the public and private research spheres would be working very hard to subtly improve on what Aquion were doing so they could compete with them.
I think that it comes down to strategy in research. For decades the focus was on better energy / power density or faster charging. Now that Aquion and a few others have changed their strategy I expect many others to follow suit.The public ones at least would be publishing their work like crazy (though likely often keeping their best and most current work tight to their chests). That's exactly what you see with many other chemistries right now. Could they all be missing the fact that the demands of grid storage are very, very different than those of vehicles and portable electronics?