MIT Technology Review - Monday 22 January, 2007
Texas company says it can make a new ultracapacitor power
system to replace the electrochemical batteries in everything from cars
to laptops.
By Tyler Hamilton
A secretive Texas startup developing what some are calling a "game
changing" energy-storage technology broke its silence this week. It
announced that it has reached two production milestones and is on track
to ship systems this year for use in electric vehicles.
EEStor's ambitious goal, according to patent documents, is to
"replace the electrochemical battery" in almost every application, from
hybrid-electric and pure-electric vehicles to laptop computers to
utility-scale electricity storage.
The company boldly
claims that its system, a kind of battery-ultracapacitor hybrid based
on barium-titanate powders, will dramatically outperform the best
lithium-ion batteries on the market in terms of energy density, price,
charge time, and safety. Pound for pound, it will also pack 10 times
the punch of lead-acid batteries at half the cost and without the need
for toxic materials or chemicals, according to the company.
The
implications are enormous and, for many, unbelievable. Such a
breakthrough has the potential to radically transform a transportation
sector already flirting with an electric renaissance, improve the
performance of intermittent energy sources such as wind and sun, and
increase the efficiency and stability of power grids--all while
fulfilling an oil-addicted America's quest for energy security.
More: http://www.techreview.com/Biztech/18086/