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PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
Sun Feb 2, 2014, 09:34 AM Feb 2014

Startup Thinks Its Battery Will Solve Renewable Energy’s Big Flaw

Aquion has started production of a low-cost sodium-ion battery aimed at making renewable energy viable.

A former Sony TV factory near Pittsburgh is coming to life again after lying idle for four years. Whirring robotic arms have started to assemble a new kind of battery that could make the grid more efficient and let villages run on solar power around the clock.

Aquion, the startup that developed the battery, has finished installing its first commercial-scale production line at the factory, and is sending out batteries for customers to evaluate. It recently raised $55 million of venture capital funding from investors including Bill Gates. The money will help it ramp up to full-speed production by this spring.

Jay Whitacre, the Carnegie Mellon professor of materials science and engineering who invented the new battery, says it will cost about as much as a lead-acid battery—one of the cheapest types of battery available—but will last more than twice as long. And while lead is toxic and the sulfuric-acid electrolyte in lead-acid batteries is potentially dangerous, the new battery is made of materials so safe you can eat them (although Whitacre says they taste terrible). Nontoxic materials are also a good fit for remote areas, where maintenance is difficult.

Read the rest at: http://www.technologyreview.com/news/523391/startup-thinks-its-battery-will-solve-renewable-energys-big-flaw/

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Startup Thinks Its Battery Will Solve Renewable Energy’s Big Flaw (Original Post) PoliticAverse Feb 2014 OP
Here's hoping. Laelth Feb 2014 #1
Lets hope this pans out madokie Feb 2014 #2
I hate it when they don't tell me how the thing works. hunter Feb 2014 #3

Laelth

(32,017 posts)
1. Here's hoping.
Sun Feb 2, 2014, 09:49 AM
Feb 2014

Storage is the big issue. The sun doesn't shine at night, and we demand power 24/7.

-Laelth

madokie

(51,076 posts)
2. Lets hope this pans out
Sun Feb 2, 2014, 11:26 AM
Feb 2014

What we need is a better battery and on the surface this sounds like it might just be it.

hunter

(38,342 posts)
3. I hate it when they don't tell me how the thing works.
Sun Feb 2, 2014, 02:43 PM
Feb 2014

I got to this:

http://www.aquionenergy.com/energy-storage-technology

After that they want to know who I am.

(Heh, I'm a Hobbit, out to take their precious.)

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