94-year-old triples LI battery capacity

mamooth

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Aug 17, 2012
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Lithium-Ion Battery Inventor Introduces New Technology for Fast-Charging, Noncombustible Batteries
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A team of engineers led by 94-year-old John Goodenough, professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin and co-inventor of the lithium-ion battery, has developed the first all-solid-state battery cells that could lead to safer, faster-charging, longer-lasting rechargeable batteries for handheld mobile devices, electric cars and stationary energy storage.
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The researchers demonstrated that their new battery cells have at least three times as much energy density as today’s lithium-ion batteries. A battery cell’s energy density gives an electric vehicle its driving range, so a higher energy density means that a car can drive more miles between charges. The UT Austin battery formulation also allows for a greater number of charging and discharging cycles, which equates to longer-lasting batteries, as well as a faster rate of recharge (minutes rather than hours).
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Additionally, because the solid-glass electrolytes can operate, or have high conductivity, at -20 degrees Celsius, this type of battery in a car could perform well in subzero degree weather.
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So, a Tesla with a 750 mile range, a Bolt with a 600 mile range. That would make the EV fully competitive with the ICE autos. Now add the fact that the EV's can be set up so that Grandpa's luxury sedan can shut down all but the million dollar sports cars at the drag strip, and the ICE is just about done.
 
Lithium-Ion Battery Inventor Introduces New Technology for Fast-Charging, Noncombustible Batteries

Goodenough’s latest breakthrough, completed with Cockrell School senior research fellow Maria Helena Braga, is a low-cost all-solid-state battery that is noncombustible and has a long cycle life (battery life) with a high volumetric energy density and fast rates of charge and discharge. The engineers describe their new technology in a recent paper published in the journal Energy & Environmental Science.

Low cost. If all of this is true, and this can be moved into full manufacture, The EV is going to be the primary auto in a decade.
 
Yes, Goodenough and Ernst Myar are strong arguments for finding a way to extend our lifespans. Myar, an evolutionary biologist, wrote his last book at 98, and died at 99. There are people that lead productive lives for the whole of their lives, and we would all benefit from them having several more productive decades of life.
 
The wife wants one in her EV...and she wants it now!
LOL I don't blame her. If they can manufacture these batteries, the EV is completely practical, from both cost and range considerations. And if you have the room and sun, easy to justify an investment in solar and a large storage battery. And that also makes a distributed grid far more likely in the near future.
 
The wife wants one in her EV...and she wants it now!
LOL I don't blame her. If they can manufacture these batteries, the EV is completely practical, from both cost and range considerations.

Oh, for a reasonable amount of the population, they already are. I have a spare ICE powered machine laying around, been trying to convince the wife to trade it for a EV only machine, take advantage of the free fuel she gets. I can get a used Leaf for $10-$11G, and drive around 70 miles every day on someone else's dime, instead of the shorter range of her car. Even with zero range, her car is full in 2 hours or so. Whereas a Leaf could charge a decent chunk of the day, and randomly run around all over the place all evening and back to work the next morning. They rock in suburbs.
Old Rocks said:
And if you have the room and sun, easy to justify an investment in solar and a large storage battery. And that also makes a distributed grid far more likely in the near future.

We've got panels, but nothing near large enough to fuel the car and run the house.
 

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