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saw a video on "3D current collector" potentially increasing EV range by 30% and was wondering if that was legit and if it can pair with a Sodium Ion Battery
Hi Matt, promising stuff. How is the world of mining minerals coming along and making it more eco friendly? Less intens on the use of pfas and other pollutants? Regards, Radboud
From the study referenced, "In this study, Mg and Sc are chosen as dopants in P2-Na0.67Ni0.33Mn0.67O2, and both have found to positively impact the cycling stability, but influence the high voltage regime in different ways." I was talking Magnesium and the dopants used. Here's the full study if you're interested: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.202309842. Also, I include a citations link in the description of each video (here's this video's script/citations): undecidedmf.com/top-5-new-battery-technologies-to-follow-in-2024/
Except the batteries from northvolt and from the study he mentioned completely negate that advantage by using Nickel and Cobalt. How is that even an improvement over LFP, a chemistry that uses only Lithium and also gets better energy density? Maybe CATL batteires are better but I dont even know at this point.
Solid State Batteries are right around the corner for cars. Toyota has already designed a car that has a 900 mile range per charge. It charges fast in under 15 minutes and will NOT catch fire. Toyota plans to offer these cars in the next few years.
I'm just sad it's not commercializing into home use. I only need like 10kWh to power my house overnight. I could probably skate by with 6 if I needed. If I had a large enough sodium battery 🔋 I could probably recharge even on a cloudy day with the right roof array. Sigh
Sodium Ion honestly makes me extremely excited for stationary storage bases. Between Starlink, solar perovskites, and sodium ion home batteries I’m getting more and more excited to build a cabin in the mountains someday everyday.
One of the biggest drawbacks to large scale desalination (other than the power required) has always been what to do with the concentrated salt solution after the potable water has been made. It would need further purification, but those Sodium Battery plants might be a good candidate for using the salts.
There's lithium in seawater too - and pretty much the entire rest of the periodic system as well, at very low concentrations. Water isn't known as the "universal solvent" for nothing... :) We might not be able to fill all our lithium needs from desalination, but it could be a good start, and as you mention, we'd end up with crabloads of sodium as well... Just gotta find somewhere to get rid of all that chlorine, once we've extracted those salts. Ugh. :)
@@michiganengineer8621 I do often wonder if it would be feasible or not to just use marine drone vessels to send it out to sea and release it slowly across the course of many nautical miles, kind of streaming off the back like a salt truck. Because in theory wouldn’t the water cycle just ensure the salt content of the water is balanced? Water always eventually makes its way back to the ocean, it’s not like we feasibly truly can just delete it. So the salt would be a relatively high concentration for a short time but then go back to neutral after dissolving and being pushed around the currents, no?
I feel that it would be better to incentive finding industrial or otherwise productive uses for the waste, similar to how pigs are turned into thousands of products after they're butchered, or how sawdust and shavings from timber are repurposed. Just throwing it back into the ocean feels like sweeping dust under the rug.
For those wondering like me. The Picture for batsand at 5:00 is the heatexchanger/ controlunit. The mentioned 40m^3 are to be buried outside and connected to said exchanger
Wow! There are so many new battery "Breakthroughs" and yet we still use the same 30+ year old battery tech. I wonder, when the new amazing batteries enter the market and change the world. I have been waiting for at least 10 years now.
Thanks for the video. Please do not use salt interchangeably with sodium. There aren't the same. Sodium is an alkali metal while a salt is a product of a neutralization reaction between an acid and a base. The salt you are referring to (or common salt) is sodium chloride and it's one of numerous kinds of salts. The statement "salt is less energy dense than lithium" should be replaced with "sodium ion batteries are less energy dense than equivalent lithium ion batteries". The word "equivalent" is also of critical importance because both sodium and lithium batteries come in various chemistries, forms and nuances that can affect their energy densities.
Cheaper batteries as long as the efficiency is good even if the energy density is not great is an interesting thing for prototyping, DIY, off-grid home applications!
Indeed. I worry about chasing higher energy density as it just makes failures a bigger problem due to more energy released. Having a bigger less energy dense battery makes more sense for stationary storage, as you have a better chance of isolating individual cells that fail from setting the whole battery on fire. Personally I just don't feel comfortable with current technologies for home storage, particularly in dense neighbourhoods where a single house fire could spread quickly. Switching to technologies that don't self ignite or release toxic gases is all very well, but it getting insanely hot will still start a fire or couse you major burns if its a phone in your pocket, or some of the more worrying things like rings that might be hard to remove fast enough.
I have always been keen on the idea of using old mines for pumped hydro. Both surface and underground operations...... If you are able to get an underground mine that is close to closing, they would be perfect for pumped hydro. Obviously the size of the openings underground, depth etc will effect the capacity.
@@broadsword6650 Just a guess, but it's probably because they need overhead access to the battery units to lift them in and out of place with a crane. Can't do that if there's a roof over them.
The electric eel is a rechargable sodium-ion battery that is self replicating, safe for the environment, with zero fire incidents over it's long development. Amazon currently carries several versions but shockingly there's no competition despite it's high potential.
Enovix is already ramping production of a pure Si anode battery, they are at least a year ahead of Amprius and their batteries are much cheaper. Sila only makes a Si anode material that they sell to battery OEMs, they have no plans to make their own batteries from what I've heard them say.
On Tuesday I talked to an Amprius VP who is in charge of building their new factory in Brighton near Denver International Airport. Once their factory - which is huge - is fully operational they'll be producing at considerable scale and their target market - drones and surveillance satellites - are hungry for their products.
@@mv80401 When will they be in full production, what customers have they lined up, what is the energy density and cost per Watt hour, how many cycles can it do before degradation starts are some of the questions I'd love to ask him.
This is huge ! Removing lithium from the equation is a game changer in long term storage. Obviously were years away from out of the box residential systems. In 5 to 10 years things could really be different. Its very exciting to me. Ty Matt as always ! Looking forward to the follow ups on this one
Some time ago I read about this thing called Pumped Heat, which stores energy as heat but by the compression of a gas to create that heat and an expansion side to create a cold side. So here it isnt really storing energy as heat, but more accurately as a temperature difference. Its a closed system too
Matt the most challenging metals in battery are copper and aluminium and steel for the casing. For NMC Nickel is important for LFP Iron is the replacement. The lithium is 10% by weight of these other metals. This is the same for Sodium as a replacement for lithium.
@@francois7355 China 'copied' the LFP technology from a Canadian patented process. This patent prevented development in the US and Asia because they have laws.
@@johndinsdale1707 interesting to know that, thanks for the info. I'm in the Southern Hemisphere, I saw a VOX video where they spoke about the import bans from China, I understand there is politics involved. But letting the average consumer suffer by hindering their access to better technology... Excuse my poor English, it's not my first language.
I'm looking forward to thermal batteries for home/business use. Low BTU models have existed for thousands of years but denser storage sounds wonderful.
Yeah that monster place was a Kmart distribution center. Then a Costco center. It is now empty. I was in there during Kmart days for electrical work on the crazy conveyor system. If that conveyor is still there, Amprius is gonna have a ton to do to clear it out before tooling up and moving in.
Planned for 2025. ASAP is what is needed to get to GWH production over the Calf facility. Cells are mostly used for various aircraft due to their high energy density (and cost).
@@hallkbrdz Yes. I have been in contact with a VP at Amprius and he indicated the designs for the interior layout/construction were almost complete. That was about a month ago. What was funny was during the planning and zoning stage with the city, residents were complaining that they would end up with lithium in their water. Mostly because of its close location to one of the cities water treatment facility (across the street). Which, is of course, complete nonsense.
There was a recent article on how MIT has come up with a way to make concrete a battery. That will be pretty cool to have every house have a battery built in to it.
Excellent overview piece. The only issue I have is in the silicon battery (silicon anode) segment it focuses on three albeit fine companies (Amprius, OneD, Sila) but overlooks the leader in supplying silicon anode material - Group14 Technologies. Group14 is about to commission the first "EV scale" silicon anode plant in the world with its JV with SK in Korea (2,000 MT/yr. or 10 GWh) and has two more of the same scale under constructoin in Moses Lake, WA that will come on line in the next 6 months. No one else is even close to that reality in manufacturing scale-up.
@UndecidedMF12 I sent you an email with more detail than it makes sense to list here. If it did not get through, please let me know here and I'll resend.
Great video! For some reason the use of the word "salt" instead of Sodium bothered me =D There is no reason to consider Sodium more or less of a salt than Lithium from a chemical perspective.
Re Sand for thermal storage. We are rapidly running out of building sand, used in concrete and mortar; actually, really rapidly. The good news is, that thermal can use any old sand, like desert sand, which is of no use in construction, and is abundant.
Sandy Munro's podcast featured the SAKUU printed dry battery that saves up to 25 percent manufacturing cost and material with improved performance and safety on the best lithium battery cells. I missed that in your report.
Lithium is not rare, it is in fact very plentiful but because of its reactability and solubility is not found in nuggets like gold and similar metals. It is ten times more abundant than tin.
Yeah, and the big mines like Greenbushes in australia are in the middle of nowhere. It was scarce, prices went high, so people went out and found more - that's how it works. Prices are now back to 2021 levels
@@BaneWilliams - perhaps a different reference frame, Lithium is more abundant than Nitrogen yet we extract 140 million tonnes of Nitrogen a year but only 35 thousand tonnes of Lithium.
@@pooroldpedro Yes many mines are shuttered not because they run out of material but because another mine has undercut them and they can no longer mine economicaly.
@@GruffSillyGoat Nitrogen is extracted directly from air, and its still much easier to extract it compared to CO2 for example because it conviniently makes up almost 80% of it. Mining relies on deposits that often have orders of magnitude higher concentrations of needed resources compared to the crust average. Carbon for example is maybe at 250 ppm, only 5-10x more abundant than Lithium, and yet we can mine it at 99% purity in absolutely massive quantities because some biological process neatly concentrated it into coal deposits hundreds of millions of years ago. But then why do we see global lithium resources at only ~90MT instead of like 10GT? Perhaps theres more to geology than just abundances?
Great video as always Matt. There is so much going on in the battery world it must be hard to keep track of it. Samsung just announced this week their SSB for mass production in 2027 with several big car OEMs on board to use them.
Not all solid state batteries are the same. Quantumscape's SSB has lithium metal anode and Solid Power's SSB has silicon anode. According to Solid Power's presentation, they are in an early R&D stage of developing their own lithium metal anode SSB which could be years away. Perhaps this is why Solid Power's market cap is only 1/10th of Quantumscape's. It would be good to see a video that compares different technologies of SSB's.
ESS Inc, in Wilsonville Oregon makes iron flow batteries and is in production now. They have I believe several dozen 500 kWh units in place with utilities and commercial users now...
I use PCMs with compute to heat my house. Much higher energy density because it incorporates phase change than Rondo's Bricks (My wife works for Rondo) and the PCMs can be 'tuned' with nano metal particles to hit the right temperature band. Finally, some thermal discussion @undecidedMF. 'bout time. 🤨
Do you happen to know what kind of batteries the engineers at the Parallel company are using for their autonomous rail cars? Have you done an episode on autonomous rail cars yet?
at 08:04 you mention the dimension of the smaller unit of batsand as 40m3. Their website indicates Size L x W x D 140 cm x 72 cm x 55 cm (0.55m3), Weight 142 Kgs.
I like the idea of largeish batteries for my 1970s Finnish home. I still have the 3 sqm steel oil storage using one room in my garage. I'm using heatpumps only now so it's just sitting there...
Living off grid I would be very much interested in sand batteries. Both for heating the house, hot water and electricity. So I have my eyes out for Batsand in Latvia.
What about storing energy as compressed gas? There was a concept a few years ago where a company was offering compressed gas powered forklifts. You get an air compressor that would fill up bottles and then you put that bottle onto the truck in the same way you do for LPG powered trucks.
Brilliant! Thank you for sharing this very informative video. I "have decided" on an unflow "flow battery" & keeping an eye on. Are you able to review a new type of battery by a Prof from the Sydney University in developing an unflow "flow battery" in Australia please? Is it commercially available now? How efficient is the battery? Keep up the brilliant coverage on various Technologies.Thank you. Greetings from Madang, Papua New Guinea!
The best thing about thermal batterys is that you dont need a battery at all, only a charging system as you can use the dirt sand and rock underneath structuures (like your house) as the thermal medium. Not nearly as efficient without isolation but it will hold enormus amounts of energy. And im sure on new structures insulation can be build in and the batterys themselves can be used as structural elements.
You missed another thermal energy storage method, and that is to cover a swimming pool that have been so readily abundant and use that water as the medium. It's been tested in Arizona and Florida.
Great info. Good level of detail while still understandable by the average educated person. I have worked in some of the traditional power industry fields and as an amateur tinkerer I’ve played with several power generation technologies like concentrated Solar power and Hydrogen. The biggest problem with hydrogen I have found is that extracting hydrogen takes about as much power as it produces. Sorry for the long intro. Are there any studies on using hydrogen as a power storage medium instead of a power source? There is very little power loss. When collecting Hydrogen using electrolysis. And then feeding it back through a fuel cell on demand.
Sodium Ion seems like the most achievable but I remember reading a science journal that mentioned an Aluminum batter tech that seems like no one is taking about.
if you look at the periodic table you will notice that Sodium is in the same column (2) as Lithium. It has similar properties, it also blows up in water, but it is much more abundant, and its properties are better understood. Also, the news this week were the magical golf balls on the floor of the ocean that generate electricity and make oxygen.
Not to pull the rug out, but I wouldn’t trust him for any of these technical topics. He happily promoted that scam solid-state battery a few weeks ago, and still hasn’t done anything to attract it even though it’s been proven to use a standard lithium battery.
Iron Air seems more energy dense still... glad too see all the science getting done too. Those carbon dioxide compressed air batteries looked good too.
Love these videos.. request!.. can you look more into upcoming and next Gen at home purchase & or project availabilities.. like the solid state off grid battery you did recently.. keep going man thanks
Everything in battery adoption comes down to high quality and high volume manufacturing. Quality to convince buyers and volume to reach economies of scale
Sorry but it actually bothered me how many times you used to Sodium Ion and "Salt" interchangeably. They are not the same. Salt is simply a compound made of positively charged ions and negatively charged ions. Table Salt is NaCl and is pretty much useless in batteries because we need that charged ion. Lithium also readily makes salts as well as many other elements like lead. It is fine making the reference to table salt but you really need to make the distinction after that. If you are going to be discussing battery chemistry then you need to make sure you are properly using chemistry terms. Edit: I forgot to add this. Another reason this is bad when talking about batteries is that there are actually salt batteries in existence. The thing is that they are generally used to store/transfer energy thermally and not chemically.
You're right because the preferred salt should be iodized but, all table salt isn't iodized. Secondly, everything registers voltage. Everything. Same thing can be done with sugar. They're both crystals.
@@adventurousloner I am really confused as to what you are saying. Iodized salt IS NOT the same as sodium ions either. Iodized salt is called as such because it is regular table salt fortified, to use the food term, with iodine. Iodine is necessary for proper thyroid function and is a nutrient many people don't get in their regular diets hence the decision to fortify table salt with the nutrient. As for your second comment on how everything registers voltage and that they are both crystals I have no idea what you are trying to say. Sorry.
@@chaosfenix I understand that but there were sodium ions just able to accessed. They have to be, essentially, tapped to access and be utilized. As to my second point a sugar battery is a real thing. Sugar is more energy dense than salt and the only thing our brains run on. Oh, and if want to experiment purchase a multimeter and hold the connectors up in open air and register the voltage of open air. It is minimal but it can be amplified. Put both tips on your body and get a reading of your body's voltage as read through your skin. Idk why but my temples read a higher voltage than anywhere else. Really anywhere around the eyes. But, that could just be still from the open air; inconclusive.
One thing that has to be considered when moving energy from solar or wind to a thermal source is the requirement for water. To convert heat to electricity requires a steam driven turbine. A 240MW combined cycle power plant in my area uses 1.25 million gallons of water per day to generate power. It affects where this type of storage should go: only where water is plentiful.
Pointing out the water heater in every home is a thermal energy storage battery blew my mind. I wonder how difficult it would be to concentrate solar into a off the shelf water heater and use it's heat to warm a building through the night? Further if the concentration of the solar was a roof top system it'd cool during the day by diverting energy that otherwise would have gone down into the building.
It's already been around, for decades (centries actually but not in modern form). It's pretty universal as well, in country's with a lot of sunlight for example you'll often see a silver metal canisters on the roofs to heat water than then supports heating and washing needs. In more northern climes your find glass tube or matt panel systems doing similar. Modern versions also use heat pumps to increase the rate of energy extraction from the panels into water based thermal stores. Cooling is a little more difficult as you have to have a temperature difference to convect the heat away from the roof, often though the outside temperature is higher than the inside temperature so this tends not to work. Although, there are systems that use white panels with a special radiative paint that cools buildings by radiating infrared light off into space.
@@GruffSillyGoat Yea it's also similar to the concept of a boiler room making hot water to distribute to buildings, but that tends to be powered by fossil fuels. But it shows that we have already thought about hot water distribution into radiators to heat buildings. I've just never thought about catching sunlight to skip the nasty fossil fuels for this. I mean, I've also seen people just line up a bunch of black hoses on their roof then connect that to a shower, for a simple solar heated shower..
This is a great video. I used to listen to Dr Bill Wittenberg on KGO (a SF based talk radio show). I’m pretty sure he mentioned having built some kind of an underground heat storage on his property. Not sure if it was heated with wood or some other means. Probably used the heat to heat his home hydronically. (At least that would be my preference.) Anyway this video reminded me of his comment. It shouldn’t be too hard to build but determining the size needed would require some engineering.
hey about heat capture in ice piston engines, why not use wax based steam type engine, wax has high heat capacity and higher boiling temp than water. for a steam engine. point is, it can store all the heat that is produced by the engine and convert it to motion. 350C boiling point to liquefy the gas wax, and transfer final heat cycle out of the engine
Hey Matt, i hear you speaking about single tecnnics to produce renewal green energy but i never hear you speaking about combinations, for example: a windmel of which the blades are provided with anode/cathode to extrude energy from ionisation ... There are a lot more of those examples of which the working of the one would favor the working of the other in certain circumstances and visda versa in other circumstances .. ?
one type of battery im interested in is hemp batteries. you take hemp and bake it at 350F for like 24 hours iirc. its basically a regular li-ion battery afaik otherwise. but by baking hemp like that you create carbon sheets that can then be used for the membrane in batteries. and its already being mass produced in wisconsin.
I've seen quite a few companies claiming they can use second hand EV batteries to create grid level storage options. There must be still a fair bit of life in them once they are no longer suitable for EV use for this to be viable. Could be an option for both reusing EV batteries and also supplying cheaper grid level storage. Solid State batteries could definitely be a way forward for longer life of batteries as well. I am on the fence with Sodium batteries still, Maybe good for grid level storage, but it may take a while before they can be small enough for EV and electronics use. I defintely like the idea of heat storage systems, which they are calling "sand batteries" for things like heating, and for some solutions, they could repalce fossil fuel powered stema generators for power plants that may need to be used to hel bolster renewables in the gird