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Old 11-14-2014, 01:08 AM
 
Location: Volcano
12,969 posts, read 28,443,557 times
Reputation: 10759

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This article in MIT Technology Review announces that Aquion's new battery technology dubbed AHI (Aqueous Hybrid Ion) is now being sold for storage of energy from wind farms and solar energy installations.

Quote:
The intermittency of renewable energy remains one of the obstacles to widespread use of the technologies.

A new kind of battery that stores energy from solar and wind power cheaply and cleanly has hit the market. It is by far the cheapest of a new generation of large, long-lived batteries that could make it possible to rely heavily on intermittent, renewable energy sources.

Aquion Energy, a company spun out of Carnegie Mellon University, recently delivered the first of its batteries to operators of small power grids, or “microgrids,” that can operate independently of the centralized grid. Microgrids, which typically use local energy sources such as wind, solar, and hydropower, could help hundreds of millions of people who live beyond conventional grids get reliable electricity.
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Aquion’s batteries use sodium ions from saltwater as their electrolyte. Electrical current moves through this brackish liquid from positive electrodes based on manganese oxide to negative ones based on carbon. The batteries are large and operate slowly, but they are also manufactured cheaply, using repurposed manufacturing equipment. Last week Aquion announced $34.6 million in funding to help it scale up production.

The batteries cost about as much as lead-acid ones, which are sometimes used now, but they last twice as long, effectively cutting the long-term costs in half. Other long-lived batteries exist, but they cost far more than lead-acid batteries.
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By making solar power cheaper than diesel fuel in many places, it could help bring clean power to some of the more than one billion people in the world without reliable electricity. As costs come down further, the batteries could find new applications beyond microgrids, including stabilizing conventional power grids as they come to rely more heavily on renewable energy.

A Much Cheaper Grid Battery Comes to Market | MIT Technology Review
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Old 11-17-2014, 04:01 AM
 
Location: UK & Pakistan
183 posts, read 292,534 times
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That is great news because future needs and dependent on renewable energy and it is only possible if we can store renewable energy efficiently and make it more cheaper.
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