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Advanced battery tech will drive auto industry

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

By Scott Faris

Scott Faris

Scott Faris

In July, when members of the Obama administration fanned out across the country to promote initiatives to support development of a U.S. electric-vehicle industry, the president himself announced a national goal of capturing 40 percent of the world’s market for advanced batteries for automotive use by 2015.

Right now, the United States makes less than two percent of these batteries, according to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).

This is part two of a two-part guest post on advanced battery technology. For part one, see: Development of new battery tech vital.

Batteries based on traditional liquid or polymer electrolyte lithium-ion technology do not scale, or provide the performance or range necessary to make electric vehicles practical and affordable. And the presence of liquid electrolytes makes them unstable and unsafe, requiring costly and sophisticated battery management solutions.

New tech needed

New, transformational energy-storage technology is required to make electric vehicles mass marketable. To that end, the DOE’s Advanced Research Project Agency-Energy Initiative (ARPA-E) announced $106 million in energy research project grants earlier this year.

Included in the DOE funding was nearly $35 million for the Batteries for Electrical Energy Storage in Transportation (BEEST) program that “seeks to develop a new generation of ultra-high energy density, low-cost battery technologies for long range plug-in hybrid and all-electric vehicles.”

A look at two approaches

Systematic innovation that addresses materials, device and manufacturing challenges is what will drive game-changing, advanced battery technologies of the future, which ARPA-E Director Dr. Arun Majumdar told Federal News Radio last April “will make today’s lithium-ion batteries obsolete.”

Let’s look at two of the 10 BEEST-supported approaches: lithium metal-air, which has numerous supporters in the energy storage community, and my own company’s solid-state lithium, also regarded as very promising and, we believe, an even more practical approach.

The PolyPlus Battery Company

This Berkeley, Calif., technology company, which has been developing single-use, lithium metal-air batteries for the U.S. government, now has begun to adapt its technology platform to create rechargeable batteries suitable for efficiently powering electric vehicles. It currently is collaborating with Corning to develop ultra-high specific energy lithium metal-air batteries based on protected lithium metal electrodes (PLEs) for transportation applications.

To make PLEs that enable ultra-high energy density batteries with lithium metal semi-fuel cells, PolyPlus says that it employs a solid electrolyte membrane that is impervious to liquids and gases, along with a unique seal, to encapsulate the lithium metal core. As a result, the electrochemically active lithium core remains isolated from the external electrolyte, enabling the formation of lithium metal-air batteries with energy density comparable to gasoline.

PolyPlus says it expects this technology platform to also lead to high-energy, nontoxic and environmentally friendly lithium metal-air batteries that are lightweight and commercially scalable.

Planar Energy

Planar Energy cell architecture comparison image

Recognizing the cost, performance and safety limitation of traditional lithium-ion batteries, my company has developed both unique methodology and technology for achieving solid-state storage cells in which the plastics, binders, powders and liquids of lithium-ion batteries are replaced with durable, nanostructured films.

Our technology couples innovative next-generation electrolyte materials with a proprietary low-cost, chemical deposition platform and manufacturing process to deliver large-format, solid-state, ceramic-like batteries at half the cost and triple the performance of existing lithium-ion batteries.

The only solid-state lithium battery company funded by ARPA-E out of thousands of applicants, Planar Energy employs a non-vacuum, ambient roll-to-roll deposition process performed at room temperatures that will sharply reduce manufacturing costs.

Called Streaming Process for Electroless Electrochemical Deposition—or SPEED— it is dramatically more flexible and scalable than existing methods, allowing Planar Energy to make self-assembled, nano-structured electrolyte and electrode materials with superior chemistries and to overcome production barriers to low-cost solid-state batteries.

Planar Energy expects that this deposition process also will reduce capital costs by half compared with solid-state battery manufacturing using high-vacuum machinery, further reducing the cost of its large-format and high-power batteries.

These and other advanced battery technologies that ARPA-E is supporting are not targeting incrementally improved performance and safety. They actually leapfrog what current lithium-ion batteries deliver and, in my estimation, represent the best opportunity to effect the transformational change in energy storage needed for mass market electric vehicles to be profitable for the automobile industry and affordable for consumers.

Scott Faris is founder and CEO of Orlando-based Planar Energy, a spin-out of the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo., and recipient of a     $4-million ARPA-E grant to accelerate the development and commercialization of its solid-state lithium battery technology.

Development of new battery technologies vital

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

By Scott Faris

Scott Faris

Scott Faris, founder and CEO of Planar Energy, holds a cathode layer for an advanced energy cell created through the company’s breakthrough SPEED materials deposition process.

ORLANDO, FL – With relentlessly gushing oil having spread into the Gulf of Mexico for months, public discourse has rightly ramped up about the need to reduce U.S. dependence on oil, and attention is increasingly being paid to the potential role that electric cars can play in solving related serious economic and security challenges.

While hybrid vehicles that have both gasoline and electric power engines, such as the Toyota Prius, have been available since 2001, fully electric vehicles are just reaching the market. For example, the Nissan Leaf is due out this year and the Chevy Volt is expected in 2011, with consumers already lined up to reserve these vehicles.

And in late June of this year, California-based Tesla Motors, which began making electric-powered roadsters in 2008 and has reportedly sold some 1,100 vehicles worldwide, issued an IPO that raised more than $24 million.

Viability of electric cars uncertain

However, the viability and likely market traction of plug-in electric cars is far from certain, as success in the electric-vehicle market is inextricably tied to the state of power storage; that is, the battery.

In some cases, batteries are projected to account for a third or more of a vehicle’s costs depending on government subsidies. The cost, for example, of the 16kWh-capacity battery pack, using traditional li-ion technology, planned for Chevrolet’s first generation “plug-in” hybrid-electric Volt, is estimated to be $10,000-$15,000, depending on which research report you read.

The overall base vehicle retail price is expected to be around $40,000, prior to a $7,500 federal tax credit, and will include an eight-year warranty to overcome the lack of consumer confidence in battery lifetime. For mass market electric vehicles to be profitable for the automobile industry, the battery cost needs to be less than $5,000 and the batteries need to work as promised in real world conditions for 10 years.

DOE report addresses battery shortcomings

Traditional li-ion battery technology has matured and faces drawbacks that prevent it from solving the cost, performance and safety obstacles to viable electric vehicles. Li-ion batteries have not proven “suitable or cost-effective for use in cars with plugs,” according to John Petersen, former director Axion Power International, citing a December 2008 U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) report that addressed several li-ion shortcomings:

  • Cost- The current cost of Li-based batteries is approximately a factor of two too high on a kW basis. The main cost drivers being addressed are the high cost of raw materials and materials processing, the cost of cell and module packaging, and manufacturing costs.
  • Performance – The barriers related to battery performance include a loss in discharge power at low temperatures and power fade over time and/or when cycled.

The underlying problem facing the power-storage industry is that it’s been trying to make traditional liquid chemistry li-ion batteries scale to a size and performance threshold that does not make sense – from safety or economic perspectives.  It is analogous to efforts to scale traditional glass-tube TV sets beyond the 30” screen.

The costly and rare raw materials that are required, along with expensive materials processing, make for steep barriers to overcome when it comes to powering electric vehicles. While li-ion batteries are adequate to deliver 70 Wh of energy that is standard for laptop computers, the technology fails to economically scale for producing the 15-20kWh battery that a typical plug-in electric vehicle requires for a 40-mile range.

Practical impact of this challenge

Liquid electrolyte li-ion technology presents safety issues, too. Because traditional li-ion batteries require liquid electrolytes, each cell is essentially a chemical reactor that suffers from thermal, chemical and mechanical degradation each time the battery is charged and discharged.

The practical impact of this challenge has been seen in the many recalls of cell phone and laptop batteries that have caught on fire.  Each automotive cell stores 10-20 times more energy than a laptop cell requiring dramatically more sophisticated electronics and packaging to make them safe. This adds further cost, weight and complexity to automotive batteries.

An unpublished DOE report prepared late in 2009 called the need for new advanced batteries “essential for the development of electric drive, high-efficiency, light-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles,” and the energy department has been proactive with grants and technical support to encourage innovation in the area.

In Part II of this series, I will examine the DOE’s efforts and some of the most promising technologies on the horizon.

Scott Faris is founder and CEO of Orlando-based Planar Energy, the developer of large-format, solid-state, high-performance and low-cost batteries.