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    New Energy-Dense Battery Could Enable Long-Distance Electric Cars

    NATIONAL HARBOR, Md.—A company founded in the Palo Alto public library has taken a dose of government money and technology and turned it into the most energy-dense battery ever. Envia System's new lithium-ion battery packs roughly twice as much energy per gram as present batteries, the company will announce here at the third annual summit of the Advanced Research Projects Agency—Energy ( ). "We achieved 400 watt-hours per kilogram," explains materials scientist Sujeet Kumar, co-founder and chief technology officer. "We have made a 40 ampere cell in a large format that automakers can recognize and use," and one that has been validated by independent energy density tests at the in Crane, Ind. With a $4 million grant from ARPA–e, the Envia technology builds on that found that including manganese in a mix of materials for the cathode—the electrode to which the lithium ions flock—better energy densities could be achieved. The team then switched focus to the anode—the electrode from which lithium ions flow to produce the electric current—and boosted its performance by incorporating silicon along with the typical graphite. By blending silicon with carbon, the researchers claim to have gotten around the problems of silicon anodes that have disabled other batteries ability to charge and discharge time and time again. Simply put, silicon swells. "It will hardly last 10 cycles because of the high volumetric changes," admits Kumar. But by encasing it in a carbon coating—as well as interlacing carbon fibers—the Envia team argues it has surmounted that problem and its battery has cycled 400 times—and counting. "Even if the silicon pulverizes in the first cycle, connectivity is maintained through the carbon fibers," Kumar adds, though that impacts the voltage. Then there is so-called "thermal runaway," an engineering euphemism for —a persistent problem with energy-dense storage devices based on lithium-ion technology. This is particularly true in cars where batteries must undergo a test in which an 8-millimeter nail penetrates the battery at speed. Envia claims its batteries pass that test. "It's mainly that the cells are much thinner," Kumar says. "It's very easy to remove the heat," though it will be up to each individual automaker whether they want to employ air or liquid cooling of battery packs. The slim, energy-dense batteries developed at an Envia center in China could reduce the number needed per car by half. And the batteries are cheap at $125 per kilowatt-hour, less than half what current batteries cost, an expense that contributes some 65 percent of the cost of an electric car. But, in addition to further independent testing, the Envia battery must now embark on the multi-year process of . GM is an investor, but Envia declines to identify who is interested. "We are working with all the brand name [carmakers] around the world," says Atul Kapadia, Envia chairman and CEO. The idea is to either form joint ventures to produce the batteries in tandem or to license the technology to pre-existing partners. But, assuming a single nail doesn't bring down the new technology, the battery could boost the , such as GM's Chevy Volt. The more watt-hours per kilogram, the farther an electric car can travel. That means a Nissan LEAF boasting Envia's batteries might be able to travel the 300 miles between St. Louis and Chicago on a single $10 charge, rather than the roughly 80 it can travel today. "We expect Envia's next generation lithium-ion battery will revolutionize the [electric vehicle] industry by eliminating the three remaining barriers to mass adoption: cost, range and safety," Kumar said in a statement announcing the breakthrough. "The ability to drive up to 300 miles on a single charge will eliminate 'range anxiety.'"

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    • Bill  •  2 mths ago
      Now let's try keeping the manufacturing of this Government financed technology in THIS country. There should be strings attached since we paid for it.
      • Mark J 2 mths ago
        Last I heard most US citizens were against the government subsidizing advanced energy solutions because of the Solyndra bankruptcy
      • Jay 2 mths ago
        ...you would think we would hold most companies to that standard. In particular the ones we provide billions of dollars in tax-rebates / incentives to. Local cities provide zoning variances and incentives for them to relocate to their cities under the premise of job creation. Ignoring the fact that the jobs created are lower-paying and the good jobs are filled by those who were already with the company. Meanwhile the local city has sacrificed millions in taxes to have a new shiny building.
      • Atilla 2 mths ago
        In the article, they said the batteries are being made in CHINA. They cannot be made in the US as it is unproven technology and the manufacturer cannot be certified under current US regulations. In addition, the labor in America is around $10 - $40 an Hour, and the labor in China is around $20 a Month. If the batteries get certified so they can be made in America, they will be so expensive nobody can afford them. Face it folks, our labor is too expensive to be able to make anything.
    • AUGUSTUS MCCRAE  •  2 mths ago
      why is this thing allowed to be made in china?
      • Robert 2 mths ago
        Probably due to EPA Regs, and labor costs...... Just guessing..
      • Spice 2 mths ago
        rare earth mining is ongoing over there and destroying china's environment as we speak! They'll get rich but we'll get even more rich!! Without sucking in the noxious fumes or drinking the water that has been tainted by the extraction of these metals!
      • Mark 2 mths ago
        Because if it were made in the U.S. that would create jobs, that notion is not in the current Admim, plan for the American people.
    • Bill  •  2 mths ago
      When you lift the car's hood, there's a pink bunny with sunglasses beating on a drum where the engine used to be.
    • markt  •  Coram, New York  •  2 mths ago
      Millions given by ARPA-E and built at their center in China. Great government investment for the US taxpayer again.
      • Retired SFC 2 mths ago
        there that sucking sound again, more jobs leaving.
      • Mark J 2 mths ago
        I thought that Obama was spending money trying to encourage development of battery technology in the US
      • Jay 2 mths ago
        The only long-term vision you have involves the words DRILL BABY DRILL. Doesn't it? Nevermind the fact that as we drill more within our own borders and destroy our own landscape, your loveable O&G companies are sending both the product and the profits elsewhere.
    • dfreybur  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  2 mths ago
      Better batteries change the game in more than just cars.

      Right now the biggest problem with solar power is storage. Installed solar power has been on an exponential growth curve ever since it was invented and in two decades should seriously cut into fossil fuel use. Price of solar power has been on a matching exponential dropping curve ever since it was invented and in 10-15 years it will finally be so cheap that roof replacements with solar will compete with shingles.

      Have an efficient storage mechanism that can be added to solar power sources and the energy goes from available during the day and depending on the weather to much wider availability. Huge gain.

      Pay attention to advances in battery science and technology. They matter.
      • JDAM 2 mths ago
        Since weight isn’t an issue why do you have to use LiPo when you can use cheaper lead acid batteries?
        The problem with storing solar power 20% of the power is lost due to charge/discharge inefficiencies and self discharge, another 10% is lost is the inverters that convert DC into AC.
      • Starguy 2 mths ago
        Solar even at the current price is much too expensive. I have a 8kW system on my house that was about $30K. If the Utility (my rate-paying neighbors) and the Federal Tax credit wasn't around to pay about HALF...it would have NEVER made any sense at all. I'm really not sure we need to do anything but figure out how to utilize our Natural Gas resources. Does solar energy even BELONG in a serious discussion about energy? I don't really think it does. In 1995 we did .0009% of US Energy.....though 2010..... it was .00145%.....yes mathematicians, I guess that is a HUGE increase.
        On the pricing issue, remember, these current LOW prices for solar panels have run many US manufacturers out of business.
      • Charles 2 mths ago
        It will be ironic when solar and battery tech from China finally helps solve America's domestic energy problems, after decades of our own efforts being stifled by big oil and coal corporations.
    • 5yankee  •  Oakland, California  •  2 mths ago
      since the battery is already being built in china to test, you know whos going to steal it. and markt is right. our gov gives them our taxs so they can build in china. REALLY??
    • the doctor  •  Los Angeles, California  •  2 mths ago
      GM will be investing heavily, they dont need it for increased range, they need it for the low cost. the battery on the Volt is so expensive they still lose money on each car they sell.
    • harry  •  Tacoma, Washington  •  2 mths ago
      This is what we need. Freedom from the oil companies keep pushing those gas guzzlers down our throats, get real, get American and get us off foreign oil and I might just might support you until then you are on the side of OPEC, Iran, Saudi Arabi, and essential all those people that hate us but love our way of life, our freedoms, and certainly our money.
    • CB  •  2 mths ago
      sounds good but check 2 things before I give it my blessing:
      1) manufacturing - what is the process? would I rather live next door to one of the manufacturing plants or TMI? Hint - check China's issue with this.
      2) fix that thermal runaway problem. it took many years for lithiums to be car safe, maybe you will do better.
    • Unhappy Camper  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  2 mths ago
      Your tax dollars at work. Basic research and development funded with public money, started in a public library yielding something that will benefit everyone.

      We really need to bring the manufacturing and development back to the United States.
    • fl1014  •  Chattanooga, Tennessee  •  2 mths ago
      looking forward to the independent articles ..... sadly so far many claiming to provide results then we never heard from again and we won't even ask about the grant money !
    • Sean  •  2 mths ago
      That was a nicely done article.
      Keep up the good work.
    • Theodore W  •  Irvine, California  •  2 mths ago
      Our dollars used to manufacture in China! Another screaming successful use of our tax dollars and creating more jobs in the US or excuse me China!
    • Photon Wrangler  •  2 mths ago
      Still puts it at about 1/6th the energy of gasoline. But that's good enough. Even the best Internal combustion engines have an average "tank-to-wheel" efficiency of 15 - 25 %, while battery electric vehicles have a "tank(or rather bank)-to-wheel" efficiency of 85%+. Most of the energy of gasoline just gets turned into heat, and can't be recovered through regenerative braking .

      Plus an electric vehicle has little or no transmission, so there some more weight lost.
      Also, there's no:
      Fuel Pump
      Oil Pump
      Oil filter
      Radiator and coolant
      Water Pump
      Camshaft
      Timing belt/chain
      Valves, springs, rockers
      Fuel Injector/Carburetor/Throttle Body
      Starter motor
      Starter battery
      Alternator
      Spark Plugs
      Air Filter
      Intake manifold
      Exhaust Manifold
      Catalytic Converter
      Muffler
      Exhaust pipe
    • Danny  •  Austin, Texas  •  2 mths ago
      now if we can convince our utilities to start using natural gas instead of coal and oil and also solar and wind where possible to generate the electricity that will be needed to charge the batteries...i think america is on the right track to oil independence..
    • Bill  •  2 mths ago
      Thank goodness. Anything to start getting away from dependence on oil.
    • Scott  •  Peachtree City, Georgia  •  2 mths ago
      This is good news. It might be the breakthrough that we have all been waiting for. I am an electric golf cart user, and would like to know if these batteries would be usable in such a vehicle. I can;t wait to see all of the negative comments that all you people living in the yahoo bubble are going to put on here.
    • Hans  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  2 mths ago
      sounds great-but,until the cars run with it-its claims are not valid-it's unproven technology!
    • ROBERT  •  Jackson, Mississippi  •  2 mths ago
      Just how did China get involved in a company from Palo Alto Ca. Who has interest from Detroit auto makers? It the freaking Green movement at work and now the Green movement is joining Big business in sending potential jobs to China? Why not let Americans work?
    • YIKES!  •  2 mths ago
      OR... they could simply string WIRES over major roads and highways

      and have UNLIMITED RANGE on electric cars TODAY!
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