A new generation of super cells promises to reshape the future of
energy.
Cambridge,
Mass.; and Argonne, Ill. — It’s probably safe to say that
freshman chemistry rarely ranks among college students’ most
memorable courses. An overcrowded lecture hall teems with
18-year-olds with chins propped on palms. Eyelids droop at the mere
mention of Planck’s constant or Bohr’s model of hydrogen. Yawns
abound.
So when Donald Sadoway began teaching introductory chemistry at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge in 1995, he
wanted to liven things up. Sure, he still lectured on the properties
of atomic arrangements in crystalline and amorphous solids, but he
did it an unusual way: He peppered his presentations with chemistry
jokes only an MIT undergrad would understand and wove literature and
art into the rigid lines and squares of the periodic table.
A lifelong music lover, Dr. Sadoway paired each lecture with a
relevant tune. He’d play Handel’s “Water Music” in a lecture on
hydrogen bonding and Aretha Franklin’s “Chain of Fools” in a class
on polymers. For DNA – that famous double-helix spiral – he’d play
Hank Ballard’s version of “The Twist.”
Get it?
These days, Sadoway’s interests lie in another seemingly
yawn-worthy subject: batteries. And he knows exactly what song to
pair it with: John Lennon’s 1971 protest anthem “Power to the
People.”
“I view the whole battery enterprise as very socially conscious,”
says Sadoway, who has started his own battery company with the hope
of changing the world’s energy future. “It would represent a major
step in bringing electricity to those who don’t have reliable access
to electricity now. And for those of us that do have reliable
access, it would democratize the generation of electricity.”
It’s a dramatic endorsement for a technology most people think
about only when their smartphone goes dark or their smoke alarm
beeps incessantly. But Sadoway isn’t alone in trumpeting energy
storage as a missing link to a cleaner, more efficient, and more
equitable energy future.
Scientists and engineers have long believed in the promise of
batteries to change the world. Now – finally – energy storage is
beginning to live up to the hype. Advanced batteries are moving out
of the lab and into “gigafactories.” They’re scaling up from
smartphones and into smartgrids. They’re moving out of niche markets
and creeping into the mainstream, signaling a tipping point for
forward-looking technologies such as electric cars and rooftop solar
panels.
The ubiquitous battery has already come a long way, of course. It
is why we can carry more computing power in our pocket than what it
took to put a man on the moon. It is why we text, take selfies, and
tap on our phones on the bus or at the dinner table. The battery –
specifically today’s lithium-ion battery – enables tweets from the
front lines of war and police videos that stir protests. For better
or worse, batteries make possible our mobile-first lifestyles, our
screen culture, our increasingly globalized and hyperconnected
world. Across the planet, billions pore over glowing screens,
totally untethered and free to roam as they please.
Still, as impressive as all this is, it may be trivial compared
with what comes next. Having already enabled a communications
revolution, the battery is now poised to transform just about
everything else – how we keep the lights on, travel from Point A to
Point B, and spread power to those without it.
The wireless age is expanding to include not just our phones,
tablets, and laptops, but also our cars, homes, and even whole
communities. In emerging economies, rural communities are
leapfrogging the wires and wooden poles that spread power across the
West. Instead, some in Africa and Asia are seeing their first
lightbulbs illuminated by the power of sunlight stored in
batteries.
Today, energy storage is a $33 billion global industry that
generates nearly 100 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year,
according to Boston-based Lux Research. By the end of the decade, it
is expected to be worth more than $50 billion and generate 160 GWh.
That’s still just the equivalent of a AAAA battery in the sprawling
energy industry, but it’s enough to attract the attention of major
companies that might not otherwise be interested in a decidedly
pedestrian technology. Even utilities, which have long viewed
batteries and the alternative forms of energy they support as a
threat, are learning to embrace the technologies as “enabling”
rather than “disruptive.”
“It’s going to take a couple of decades, but the revolution is
starting to happen now,” says Cosmin Laslau, a batteries analyst at
Lux.
Done well, the revolution would mean energy used more wisely,
more widely, and more cleanly. Today’s battery breakthroughs come as
the world looks to expand modern energy access to the billion or so
people without it, while also cutting back on fuels that warm the
planet. Those simultaneous challenges appear less overwhelming with
incrementally better answers to a centuries-old quandary: how to
make power portable.
To be sure, the battery still has a long way to go before the
nightly recharge completely replaces the weekly trip to the gas
station. One need only ask the pilots of the Solar Impulse 2 about
the shortcomings of today’s batteries. The solar-powered aircraft,
which made the first attempt to fly around the world without
consuming a drop of fuel, was grounded earlier this year after
frying its batteries over the Pacific Ocean.
A battery-powered, electrified world comes with its own risks,
too. Namely, what happens to the centralized electric grid, which
took decades and billions of dollars to build, as more and more
people become “prosumers,” generating and consuming their own energy
on-site?
No one knows which – if any – battery technology will ultimately
dominate, but one thing remains clear: The future of energy is in
how we store it.
“So, ‘Power to the People,’ ” Sadoway reiterates. “Of course,
they were referring to political power, but it’s a pretty good
metaphor in this case.”
• • •
The battery’s rising influence is a product of its falling
price. Like the solar panels they aim to bolster, batteries must
compete with well-
entrenched mainstream fuels and the piston engines, power plant
turbines, and other infrastructure associated with them. Also, like
those of solar panels, battery costs have followed a dramatic
downward curve over recent years.
Between 2007 and 2014, electric car battery costs dropped by more
than half – from more than $1,000 per kilowatt-hour to around $410
per kWh, according to a study published earlier this year in the
journal Nature Climate Change. It’s still not cheap enough to put an
electric car in every garage, but it’s enough to carve out a niche
market that gives a new technology the foundation from which to
spread through suburbs and urban motor pools. And that trend should
continue as manufacturers scale up production, tweak financing, and
find other efficiencies: By 2025, the cost of batteries in electric
vehicles will drop to as low as $172 per kWh, according to Lux.
“One of the remarkable things, looking back historically, is that
for basically a century it was all about the internal combustion
engine,” Dr. Laslau says. “We’re taking fuels and we’re blowing them
up inside of cylinders. We’re now at a point where the alternative
is here, and it’s staying here.”
Tech giant Google has a secretive team building better batteries,
according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. Analysts speculate
that Apple is doing the same, based on the company’s job postings.
Nearly every major automaker has an electric vehicle for sale and
many – notably Toyota and General Motors – are investing millions in
designing new batteries to power them. It’s a veritable moon race to
see who can build the first affordable electric vehicle to drive 200
miles on a single charge. Many analysts believe hitting that mark
would dramatically accelerate a global transition from fossil fuels
to electricity as the energy of choice for the automotive world.
Nor are Americans the only ones with their eyes on the battery’s
future. Panasonic in Japan and Samsung in South Korea are two
multinational companies that have long dominated the lithium-ion
field. China’s lithium-ion battery market is expected to expand 400
percent by 2017, according to research firm China Chemicals Market.
Chinese firms are pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into US
battery companies, hoping for new technologies to meet the
ballooning demand. Germany, which is attempting perhaps the most
dramatic energy transition across the globe, is seen as a key early
market for emerging home battery technologies. BMZ, based in
Karlstein, Germany, is building Europe’s largest rechargeable
battery production facility.
In the United States, Tesla Motors is among those pushing the
battery era the hardest. The California-based company has spent the
past 12 years doing to electric vehicles what Apple did to early MP3
players – making them cool. It already has a battery-powered car
that goes 200 miles on a single charge – the Model S – but its
$70,000-plus price tag keeps it beyond the reach of most drivers.
Tesla believes it can bring its car to the masses without any
radical new breakthroughs in the lithium-ion chemistry that powers
most of today’s gadgets and electric vehicles. Last February the
company unveiled a $5 billion plan for a battery “gigafactory” that
it says will be able to supply half a million cars when it opens.
Scale, in other words, could be the secret to an inexpensive,
200-mile-range electric vehicle.
But Tesla’s battery ambitions go beyond just cars. Elon Musk, the
company’s dynamic chief executive, envisions a future in which
batteries – paired with solar panels – power homes, businesses, and
whole communities. By providing on-site storage for backup power,
the setup would directly address renewable energy’s Achilles’ heel –
that the sun doesn’t always shine and the wind doesn’t always blow.
It would shift a reliance on fossil fuels to a reliance on a power
plant that is 4.5 billion years old and 93 million miles away.
“We have this handy fusion reactor in the sky called the sun,”
Mr. Musk mused in April at the launch of Tesla’s suite of
energy-storage devices. “You don’t have to do anything. It just
works, shows up every day, and produces ridiculous amounts of
power.”
Most analysts expect the Powerwall, Tesla’s battery for homes, to
appeal to only a small number of people, at least until the price
and associated costs drop further. With a capacity of between only 7
and 10 kWh, and a price tag ranging from $3,000 to $3,500, the
economics just don’t make sense for most consumers across the US.
But the larger-sized Powerpacks are already proving attractive to
businesses and utilities, which have more of a financial incentive
to avoid the violent fluctuations in energy supply and demand. And
when the gigafactory comes on line in 2017, Tesla hopes the
economies of scale will drive prices down to a point where home
batteries entice a lot of people.
For Musk, “a lot of people” means just about everyone. At April’s
launch, Musk calculated it would take roughly 2 billion Powerpacks
to electrify the entire world. That sounds like a lot, but, as Musk
noted, it’s on par with the number of cars and trucks on the road.
“This is actually within the power of humanity to do,” he said.
“We have done things like this before.”
• • •
When the National Academy of Engineering cast about for
something to anoint as the greatest engineering achievement of the
20th century, it didn’t settle on the automobile. Or the airplane.
Or even anything from the gee-whiz world of electronics.
It chose the pedestrian electrical grid.
That perhaps shouldn’t be surprising. The electrical grid is the
aorta of modern civilization – the channel that brings power and
light to virtually every family and factory in the developed world.
But it does have a fundamental flaw.
“The grid is the biggest supply chain on the planet – and it has
zero inventory,” says Sadoway, perched on a stool in a lab back at
MIT. “The electricity that powers the lights in this building was
generated just moments ago.”
Power, in other words, is tailor-made for the moment you need it.
Grid operators are constantly ramping generators up or down to
ensure supply meets demand. Entire power plants remain idle for much
of the year, called into service only when people reach for their
thermostats – during a heat wave or a polar vortex, for example. If
supply and demand fall out of sync, “bad things start to happen,”
Sadoway says. It’s a delicate balancing act of mammoth proportions.
No wonder, then, that batteries represent a potential paladin for
the electrical grid. Grid-scale batteries would give utilities an
emissions-free, easily dispatchable way to store energy that can be
summoned during moments of surging demand. To some, batteries could
do to electricity what refrigeration did to our food supply and
storage tanks to our access to water.
“It doesn’t have to be raining when you’re taking a shower
because we’ve got cisterns,” Sadoway says. “If we had something
analogous to that for electricity, it would make the supply chain so
much more stable.”
Sadoway is skeptical that today’s lithium-ion chemistry will do
the trick. Inspired by aluminum smelting, he and his students have
developed an all-liquid-metal battery that packs a bigger punch than
lithium-ion and – most important – does so over a longer life span.
The battery’s unique floating chemistry doesn’t require internal
structures that degrade over time, which means it can discharge and
recharge tens of thousands of times before wearing out. His team
also uses earth-abundant minerals such as magnesium and antimony
instead of scarcer metals such as lithium that pervade today’s
batteries.
“If you want to make it dirt-cheap, make it out of dirt,” Sadoway
is fond of saying, “and preferably dirt from your own backyard,
because then you know you have a secure supply chain!”
In 2010, Sadoway and David Bradwell, one of his students,
cofounded a company called Ambri with the intent of commercializing
the technology. Five years later, it has 50 employees, more than $50
million in financing, and a prototype manufacturing plant tucked
away in an industrial park in Marlborough, Mass. Count Microsoft
founder Bill Gates among its investors. The tech magnate took one of
Sadoway’s courses anonymously online, and reached out soon
thereafter to learn more about the promising technology.
Later this year, Ambri is launching two pilot projects, and it
eventually hopes to sell its modular battery packs to utilities,
hospitals, and other groups that could benefit from large amounts of
on-demand electricity.
• • •
Halfway across the country from MIT, in the woods
southwest of Chicago, there is something like a college campus where
all the students have advanced degrees and work on the great
challenges of our time.
Argonne National Laboratory is a staple of postwar American
science. Nuclear power has its origins here. Argonne scientists
analyzed lunar rocks from humanity’s first moon landing. In 1957, a
physicist stuck his arm in an ultrasonic scanner at Argonne, and –
voilà – the world’s first ultrasound image of the human
body.
Today, the sprawling 1,500-acre complex still feels like an
Atomic Age temple to science, but the work inside is geared firmly
toward today’s challenges. Those who wander Argonne’s labyrinthine
corridors talk coolly but intently about the need to wean ourselves
off the carbon-heavy fuels that made modern civilization possible.
They worry about dependence on oil from unstable foreign
governments. They worry about smog-choked skylines and emissions
that trap heat in the atmosphere.
But instead of inventing a better solar panel or wind turbine,
one team at Argonne is looking for energy solutions in better
batteries.
The Argonne-led Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR)
is looking for the next big breakthrough in energy storage – a
technology that would store at least five times as much energy as
today’s batteries at one-fifth the cost. In late 2012, it received a
$120 million grant from the Department of Energy to make it happen
within five years. It’s a timeline that even Jeff Chamberlain, who
leads JCESR’s partnerships with industry, admits is at the limit of
theoretical possibility. But if the center meets its mark, he says,
it would do to energy what social media has done to information and
communication.
“The end result is that, for good or for bad, individuals have a
voice in a way that we never did in history,” Dr. Chamberlain says,
echoing Sadoway’s view of batteries as democratizing. “I think that
kind of thing can happen with energy, and the battery is a huge
enabler.”
To an outsider, JCESR (pronounced “jay-Caesar”) feels like a
heady test kitchen. PhD-enabled chefs cull ingredients from the
periodic table to design recipes steeped in the fundamental laws of
the universe. Take a pinch of manganese, add a dash of nickel, stir
in cobalt, bake at 400 degrees for 30 minutes – and hope what comes
out will help change the future of the world.
A typical day here is like “studying for a physics test,” says
Jason Croy, who oversees scientists testing small battery prototypes
at Argonne. “You’re thinking about things you don’t understand –
that nobody understands.”
Even so, the basic science of batteries is simple. There’s an
anode on one end, a cathode on the other, and a chemical electrolyte
in between. When a battery is used, the anode releases positively
charged atoms called ions that travel across the electrolyte to the
cathode. The cathode then attracts negatively charged particles
called electrons that flow through an external circuit, bringing to
life whatever device is connected. When a battery is plugged in to
recharge, the ions flow back to the anode, converting electric
energy back into stored chemical energy.
“The science of batteries is really fundamental science,” Dr.
Croy says. “It’s physics – basic problems at the atomic and
subatomic level.”
Italian scientist Alessandro Volta is widely considered the
field’s founding father, having developed a primitive battery using
metal discs and brine-soaked cardboard back in 1800. The first
lead-acid battery came 60 years later and still serves as the
energy-storage device in most cars. Zinc-carbon batteries powered
early hand-held devices in the first half of the 20th century. The
rise of alkaline batteries paved the way for better-performing
flashlights, remote controls, and portable electronics in the 1960s.
Then came the high-density, lightweight lithium-ion battery in the
1980s, which enabled today’s mobile revolution.
Now JCESR is looking beyond lithium ion to find the next
breakthrough in battery science – in different ions, new chemical
reactions, and unique battery structures. The other half of JCESR’s
mission is to streamline the cumbersome process of developing a new
battery technology, testing a prototype, scaling it up in the lab,
replicating it on the factory line, and, finally, safely installing
it in the car you drive.
For Chamberlain, a self-professed “Detroit kid” who witnessed
firsthand the decline of US manufacturing, there’s a personal stake
in all this.
“My grandfather, my uncle, were lifelong Ford employees ... and
we’ve watched Detroit become decimated,” he says. “It’s difficult to
say whether that could have been prevented, but there are certain
technological opportunities to bring innovation and manufacturing
back onto our soil.”
• • •
Thirty-one years ago, Motorola released the world’s first
commercial cellular phone – an unwieldy plastic brick weighing two
pounds, with a price tag of $3,995. It won the favor of wealthy Wall
Street types (think Gordon Gekko), but it was impractical for a
general public that made do with landlines and, in some cases, car
phones. At the time, no one could be certain portable phones would
ever make sense for the average consumer.
Today, the battery finds itself at a similar juncture. True, the
battery has been around for a long time and already powers
everything from laptops to cordless screw guns. But the question is
whether the next generation of batteries will be cheap enough and
have enough storage to make the electric car and home energy systems
as omnipresent as the iPhone.
Energy, of course, is vastly different from telecommunications,
and it will likely take much longer to overhaul the world’s vast
network of pipelines, power plants, and transmission lines. But a
transition has already begun to some sort of new Eveready future,
judging from the amount of money and intellectual power flowing into
next-generation batteries.
And it is the next generation of thinkers fathoming the
unfathomable that keeps Sadoway mixing exotic battery brews for his
company in Marlborough and teaching in classrooms in Cambridge.
“You’ve got bright people who are intellectually fearless, and we
give them impossible problems and they work on them with
enthusiasm,” he says of his students. “It stands to reason [that we
should] harness that unbridled enthusiasm and intellectual
horsepower.”
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http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/Energy/2015/0830/How-a-new-battery-revolution-will-change-your-life