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Author provides inside look at Argonne National Laboratory’s efforts to build a ‘super battery’
uchicago.edu ^ | March 27, 2015 | By Laura Alessio

Posted on 03/30/2015 4:11:19 PM PDT by ckilmer

Author provides inside look at Argonne National Laboratory’s efforts to build a ‘super battery’

So secretive were efforts to create the first self-sustained nuclear reaction in 1942 that physicist Enrico Fermi and his Manhattan Project team quietly toiled beneath the stands of Stagg Field and communicated with each other in code.

That breakthrough ushered in the nuclear age, but also led to the creation of the country’s first national lab, Argonne National Laboratory. Some 70 years later, with 20 countries racing to achieve another world-changing scientific shift—to design and build a better rechargeable “super battery”—Argonne scientists are eager to convey the implications of their work to a broad audience. That’s why Argonne allowed veteran reporter Steve LeVine two years of access to write about U.S. researchers leading the “battery war” charge.

 

LeVine profile

Steve LeVine

“I wanted to be with America’s team in the battery race, and I found that team right here at Argonne,” said LeVine, a foreign policy journalist who covered energy security and political conflicts in the former Soviet Union, Pakistan and Afghanistan. “I wanted people to get an idea of how innovation and technology shifts happen.”

The result is his new book, The Powerhouse: Inside the Invention of a Battery to Save the World, in which LeVine lays out the high stakes of the battery race: The winner would steer geopolitical power away from Russia and the Middle East, dominate the production of affordable electric cars, and mitigate climate change by transforming the electric grid, drastically reducing fossil fuel consumption.

Reporting the ‘battery war’

For LeVine, Washington correspondent for Quartz and a veteran reporter for the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and Newsweek, finding the epicenter of American battery research was easy. Argonne employs several of the world’s top experts, including Michael Thackeray, a pioneer in a lithium battery technology inside the hybrid-electric Chevy Volt. But while the lab’s work is no longer top-secret, it still took LeVine a year to gain permission to embed himself within the lab. Even after the Department of Energy granted approval, Argonne’s scientists had reservations about LeVine spending two straight years with them.

“It was great that he wanted to show what research and innovation is really like, because it is difficult to tell the story to the average person exactly what it is we do with their tax dollars,” said Jeff Chamberlain, executive director of the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (or JCESR, pronounced “J-Caesar”) at Argonne, whom LeVine eventually made his “guide” at Argonne and a prominent character in The Powerhouse. “I told him the problem was that when you follow a product development, you are assured the product is coming out within a target timeframe. But with scientific discovery, you can’t predict that. It might be tomorrow, it might be a month from now, it might be three years from now. We just don’t know when we’re going to have the big breakthrough.”

Another doubt Chamberlain and others expressed was whether LeVine could make a readable, dramatic story out of the tweaking and re-tweaking of molecular structures in hopes of finding one capable of storing and transporting a strong, steady supply of energy. After all, batteries hadn’t seen many significant advances since Alessandro Volta invented the first one in 1799—and not for lack of scientists at Argonne and elsewhere trying. Even famed inventor Thomas Edison’s efforts to create rechargeable storage batteries left him less than optimistic about their potential: “The storage battery is, in my opinion, a catchpenny, a sensation, a mechanism for swindling the public by stock companies,” Edison wrote in The Electrician in 1883.

“My concern was that if LeVine wrote a dud,” Chamberlain said, “it would defeat the purpose and make people think the field was just impossible, so why fund it?” His mind was put to ease after he received a package from LeVine containing three books. One was LeVine’s earlier book, The Oil and the Glory: The Pursuit of Empire and Fortune on the Caspian Sea, describing the geopolitical implications of society’s reliance on oil. Another was The Soul of a New Machine, a compelling account of an engineering team’s race to design a next-generation computer that earned author Tracy Kidder a Pulitzer Prize in 1982. The third book was The Department of Mad Scientists: How DARPA Is Remaking Our World, from the Internet to Artificial Limbs, in which a writer embedded at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency brought to life its innovative undertakings.

Writing a ‘thriller’

LeVine said he set out to write The Powerhouse as a “thriller,” and reviews since its February release suggest he achieved his goal. New York Times business columnist Joe Nocera called it “a rollicking good tale.” Although LeVine didn’t witness a major scientific breakthrough, his book culminates with Argonne’s dramatically successful 2012 bid to host the U.S. Department of Energy’s battery innovation hub, to be modeled after the strong scientific management characteristics of the Manhattan Project and other efforts spurred by nationally declared goals.

In addition to its many own researchers, Argonne, through JCESR, now coordinates some of the battery work conducted at four other DOE national labs, five universities and four private companies to speed advancement toward a goal of fives: batteries that are five times more powerful and five times cheaper within five years.

Chamberlain said JCESR already has yielded significant developments, including a new computer modeling system called the Electrolyte Genome that resulted from a collaboration between hub scientists Gerbrand Ceder at MIT, Kristin Persson at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Larry Curtiss at Argonne. The new system has already allowed scientists to develop tens of thousands of new molecular systems before having to spend the resources to actually synthesize them, Chamberlain said.

“It really is a team effort to make these larger technology shifts,” he said.

 

 

 

 

Author provides inside look at ANL's efforts to build a 'super battery'

9 hours ago by Laura Alessio
New book provides inside view of efforts to build 'super battery' at Argonne National Lab
Argonne National Laboratory coordinates nationwide battery research through JCESR, in an initiative that aims to make batteries five times more powerful and five times cheaper within five years. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-03-author-anl-efforts-super-battery.html#jCp

Author provides inside look at ANL's efforts to build a 'super battery'

9 hours ago by Laura Alessio
New book provides inside view of efforts to build 'super battery' at Argonne National Lab
Argonne National Laboratory coordinates nationwide battery research through JCESR, in an initiative that aims to make batteries five times more powerful and five times cheaper within five years. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-03-author-anl-efforts-super-battery.html#jCp

 


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: argonne; battery; tesla
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This article checks in on the ongoing efforts of the national labs to produce a super battery for cars. While there will be plenty on the boards here who don't want the feds spending any money on this kind of R&D --as a practical matter the pubbies --if they get the white house in 2017--won't be able to cut the budget for this work for another two years at best.

In my opinion this battery business shows the dems have a grand technological vision that the pubbies need to match and exceed with a promise to cut the cost of desalinized water so low the USA will be able to turn the deserts of the USA green and bring water back to California. The technology to do this includes fourth generation nuclear reactors 3d printing and materials research on a big scale. The payoff would be to double the habitable size of the USA and eventually to double the size of the habitable earth.

1 posted on 03/30/2015 4:11:19 PM PDT by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

A Soul of the New Machine for our time, a gripping account of invention, commerce, and duplicity in the age of technology

A worldwide race is on to perfect the next engine of economic growth, the advanced lithium-ion battery. It will power the electric car, relieve global warming, and catapult the winner into a new era of economic and political mastery. Can the United States win?

Steve LeVine was granted unprecedented access to a secret federal laboratory outside Chicago, where a group of geniuses is trying to solve this next monumental task of physics. But these scientists— almost all foreign born—are not alone. With so much at stake, researchers in Japan, South Korea, and China are in the same pursuit. The drama intensifies when a Silicon Valley start-up licenses the federal laboratory’s signature invention with the aim of a blockbuster sale to the world’s biggest carmakers.

The Powerhouse is a real-time, twoyear thrilling account of big invention, big commercialization, and big deception. It exposes the layers of competition and ambition, aspiration and disappointment behind this great turning point in the history of technology.

http://www.penguin.com/book/the-powerhouse-by-steve-levine/9780670025848


2 posted on 03/30/2015 4:17:16 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer
...cut the cost of desalinized water so low the USA will be able to turn the deserts of the USA green and bring water back to California.

Not if the BLM, EPA, and an alphabet of other agencies and special interests have their way. ("Friends of the Dust Devil", etc.)

3 posted on 03/30/2015 4:18:37 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: ckilmer

Besides, without one heckofa battery, there will never be a plasma rifle in the 40 watt range...


4 posted on 03/30/2015 4:20:02 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: ckilmer

That’s great, but if something is worth building, it is only because there is market demand for it and a PROFIT MOTIVE for a private enterprise do the research and develop it.


5 posted on 03/30/2015 4:20:03 PM PDT by Rodamala
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To: ckilmer
The result is his new book, The Powerhouse: Inside the Invention of a Battery to Save the World, in which LeVine lays out the high stakes of the battery race: The winner would steer geopolitical power away from Russia and the Middle East, dominate the production of affordable electric cars, and mitigate climate change by transforming the electric grid, drastically reducing fossil fuel consumption.

And the winner is: Fracking.

6 posted on 03/30/2015 4:29:05 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: ckilmer

Here’s the problem... When you produce a battery that is capable of producing many KW hours of power, you have also produced a bomb. Spacings of a few mm between the negative and positive terminals is an explosion waiting to happen...

Nothing can make it safe. The future is in fuel cells, not batteries.


7 posted on 03/30/2015 4:32:28 PM PDT by babygene
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To: ckilmer
the next engine of economic growth

a new era of economic and political mastery

this great turning point in the history of technology

All this within a couple of very short paragraphs.

I suppose it might be interesting, if one can survive the onslaught of hype and wishful thinking.

8 posted on 03/30/2015 4:37:06 PM PDT by 9thLife ("Life is a military endeavor..." -- Pope Francis)
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To: Smokin' Joe
...cut the cost of desalinized water so low the USA will be able to turn the deserts of the USA green and bring water back to California.

Not if the BLM, EPA, and an alphabet of other agencies and special interests have their way. ("Friends of the Dust Devil", etc.)

Damn right, that's where all the solar panels are going.

9 posted on 03/30/2015 4:37:36 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: babygene
When you produce a battery that is capable of producing many KW hours of power, you have also produced a bomb

Thank you for confirming my suspicions.

10 posted on 03/30/2015 4:38:06 PM PDT by 9thLife ("Life is a military endeavor..." -- Pope Francis)
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To: babygene

...so they’ll have to translate the book into Arabic.


11 posted on 03/30/2015 4:38:43 PM PDT by 9thLife ("Life is a military endeavor..." -- Pope Francis)
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To: ckilmer

Lithium-ion: so far, a super costly battery.


12 posted on 03/30/2015 4:45:20 PM PDT by familyop (We Baby Boomers are croaking in an avalanche of corruption smelled around the planet.)
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To: ckilmer

The higher higher the salaries the slower the results will be. The results will be just enough to keep the grants rolling in.


13 posted on 03/30/2015 5:12:05 PM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: ckilmer
If I were Senator Cruz, I'd support as part of my political "plank" the idea of aggressive research into the ultimate fission nuclear reactor design: the molten-salt reactor that uses thorium-232 dissolved in molten fluoride salts as nuclear fuel.

If successful, we have enough supply of thorium-232 worldwide to essentially electrify all our railroads, run all our major commercial ships on a very safe form of nuclear power, and generate enough power to desalinate seawater on a breathtaking scale, turning most of the US Southwest into some of the world's best arable farmland (as the Imperial Valley so clearly demonstrated and what Israelis and Saudis did by turning what was once desert into highly productive farmland--deserts when you have access to a decent supply of fresh water can be extremely productive).

14 posted on 03/30/2015 5:40:29 PM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: babygene

The future is in fuel cells, not batteries.
.................
One way or the other. The car buying public is going to be treated to several decades of some very beautiful competition among various transportation modes which will drive the cost of energy and transport down. and down significantly.

the result will be another great explosion of wealth such as was been seen at the turn of the 20th century. when the internal combustion engine first came on the scene.


15 posted on 03/30/2015 5:41:05 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: 9thLife; babygene; ckilmer
SuperCaps are also within the realm of possibility.

The "bomb effect" is one thing that has hampered development on them, as well...

16 posted on 03/30/2015 5:50:42 PM PDT by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias... "Barack": Allah's current ally...)
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To: Vince Ferrer

And the winner is: Fracking.
.......
Agree. For now. and for the next 5-8 years the winner is fracking. But after the gigafactory gets up and running in 2017-8 —imho things will start to look different even before material change sets in.


17 posted on 03/30/2015 5:52:40 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: 9thLife

I suppose it might be interesting, if one can survive the onslaught of hype and wishful thinking.
...............
Maybe but there’s some awfully deep pockets and way too many high powered scientists engaged in this project from way too many countries—to just shrug it off.

And of course Tesla’s gigafactory is only 2-3 years away from completion.


18 posted on 03/30/2015 5:54:51 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: Smokin' Joe

Not if the BLM, EPA, and an alphabet of other agencies and special interests have their way. (”Friends of the Dust Devil”, etc.)
.........
Yeah true. But in theory if the pubbies controlled the white house they would have some say over these various alphabet agencies.


19 posted on 03/30/2015 5:55:58 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: 9thLife; babygene

When you produce a battery that is capable of producing many KW hours of power, you have also produced a bomb

Thank you for confirming my suspicions.
..................
You mean like the gas tank in every vehicle on the road.


20 posted on 03/30/2015 5:59:47 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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