Posted on 05/22/2009 3:07:26 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
But there is a tweak that interests me, and it should interest investors as well. It's a lithium-titanate battery developed by Altair Nanotechnologies /quotes/comstock/15*!alti/quotes/nls/alti (ALTI 1.10, +0.05, +4.76%) , and it's now being experimented with by the U.K.'s Lightning car company, as well as at least one U.S. carmaker.
What makes this battery valuable for automotive use is its recharging speed. It's optimized to recharge in minutes, not hours. That makes the idea of fueling stations for electric vehicles feasible, perhaps even practical.
It also can be recharged more than 5,000 times, or every day for more than a decade. Indeed, the recharging potential of these batteries could outlast a car's lifetime, and so the company needs to figure out ways to recycle.
The key to this battery is its unique nanotechnology anode, which increases the actual surface area of the anode by 30 times. That allows for faster charging and discharging.
But the drawback is price. Costing perhaps three times that of the competition, this battery will remain pricey until mass production techniques are used.
Meanwhile, this is one of the many companies in the lithium-ion business to watch -- and one of the few that is publicly traded.
(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...
By the time this set to be widespread, other battery technology will replace it IMO. ‘Spin’ batteries are fascinating to me right now. We don’t have enough Lithium anyway so that is generally a moot point.
Electric-only cars to be mandated to fill American roads within 10 years, with no future president able to repeal that (how they’d do it, I know don’t).
Spin batteries? Something that generates charge by spinning?
No, magnetic charging and discharging. I’ll look for a link.
Phoenix Motorcars, the Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.-based company
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Electric auto players ready for U.S. launch
Sep 6, 2007, 3:44 p.m. EST
By Steve Gelsi, MarketWatch
The vehicle runs on electric motors powered by batteries made by Altair Nanotechnologies.
They have an SUV...
The future of the electric vehicle is here.
Phoenix Motorcars manufactures zero-emission, freeway-speed, all-electric vehicles. It is an early leader in the mass production of full-function, green electric trucks and sport utility vehicles (SUVs) for commercial fleet and consumer use. Based in Ontario, California, Phoenix Motorcars uses the revolutionary lithium titanate battery solution, a non-toxic, all-battery pack that eliminates noise and toxic vehicle emissions that contribute to air pollution.
Read this http://ergobalance.blogspot.com/2008/05/world-lithium-supplies.html before you rule that out.
So, instead of only being able to commute from San Mateo to San Francisco, or, from San Marino to downtown LA, now, it could mean from SJ to SF and San Bernadino to LA. Big whoop.
Read this http://ergobalance.blogspot.com/2008/05/world-lithium-supplies.html before you rule that out.
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In January 2007, a member of our Design News staff claimed responsibility for a murder; see I Killed the Electric Car by Chuck Murray. Chucks article presented simple calculations to illustrate that for standard American drivers, conventional electric cars make no sense due to long charge time and low mileage-per-charge. Nonetheless, Chuck elicited some angry reader feedback including a post, What about the Chevy Volt, Chuck!?, by our Editor-In-Chief, John Dodge, who apparently likes to wait 6 hours every time he needs to fuel his car.
After almost a year of staring one another down from their respective cubicles and periodically firing ethanol and bio-diesel spitballs at each other across the office, Chuck and John can finally put their debate to rest.
Advances in battery technology originally aimed at lap top computers piggybacked atop zero-emission vehicle regulations established to entice development of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles may be breathing new life into the electric car.
Whos Resurrecting the Electric Car? by David Schneider appeared in the October edition of American Scientist Magazine. According to this article, lithium-ion batteries first used in lap top computers are now being successfully integrated into street-legal cars such as the high-end Roadster by Tesla Motors. Powered by computer batteries, this car boasts the performance, speed, and range of its gas-fired sports car cousins. While consumers may need to take out a second mortgage to buy a Tesla Roadster (base price $98,000 before upgrades), the company has already filled all available reservations for the 2008 model year, and they will soon be taking orders for their 2009 model. While a cursory search failed to reveal any data on this companys financial viability, Teslas growing product wait list seems to denote a company in no danger of going under.
When Chuck Murray killed the electric car in January 2007, his calculations considered the time required to traverse various distances in excess of the EV1s 70- to 100-mile-per-charge range. Key to this analysis was the inconvenient five-hour charge time associated with lead-acid or nickel-metal-hydride batteries. With four charge stops at five hours per stop between Chicago and Detroit, Chucks regular 5-hour jaunt increased to a 25 hour exercise in patience.
To eliminate long charge times, the new generation of electric vehicles will be powered by lithium-based batteries related to the cells used to power laptops, but with a twist. Historically, the challenge with scaling-up lithium batteries was their tendency to release oxygen if they overheated, causing fires and explosions. However, by switching the batterys carbon chemistry for titante nano-particles, the fire hazard is eliminated. Although this switch reduces energy density with respect to carbon-based lithium-ion batteries, it enables scale-up of lithium technology competent for safe use in electric cars.
Nano-titanate-based lithium batteries have greater energy density than the lead-acid or nickel-metal-hydride batteries of the old EV1. Plus, they have an even more desirable attribute: the ability to recharge in about 10 minutes as opposed to hours. For rapid charging, the Altairnano lithium titanate battery is the leading power source for automotive applications. The uncanny 10-minute recharge time is enabled by nano-materials that dramatically reduce ion travel distance while increasing the surface area available to the ions.
Another startup electric car manufacturer, Phoenix Motorcars, is using this new battery technology in their zero-emission fleet vehicles. Rapid recharge time and 100+ mile range may qualify vehicles from Phoenix Motorcars for the highest zero emission vehicle category established by the California Air Resources Board. This category, originally slated for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, may provide Phoenix substantial credit for each vehicle they put on the road.
Driving a Phoenix automobile powered by Altairnano batteries, even Chuck Murray, the great murder of electric vehicles, could comfortably get from Chicago to Detroit in about 5 hours and 30 minutes without burning a drop of gasoline. John Dodge could make it in 5.5 hours too, if he was willing to give up those six-hour pit stops.
See #15.
fyi
I give em five years, I’ll bet you a dollar.
The skeptics speculate but as it sits we cannot access the known sources of lithium needed.
A weblog devoted to the discussion of thorium as a future energy resource, and the machine to extract that energy--the liquid-fluoride nuclear reactor.
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