News — Battery
MSE Supplies Battery Material was Used by Georgia Tech Researchers in an Innovative Method for Low-cost, Fast Production of Solid-State Batteries for EVs
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Original article by Georgia Institute of Technology A new fabrication technique could allow solid-state automotive lithium-ion batteries to adopt nonflammable ceramic electrolytes using the same production processes as in batteries made with conventional liquid electrolytes. The cathode material NMC111 used in this research was sourced from MSE Supplies. A new Georgia Tech manufacturing process could enable battery makers to produce lighter, safer, and more energy-dense batteries. Credit: Allison Carter, Georgia Tech The melt-infiltration technology developed by materials science researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology uses electrolyte materials that can be infiltrated into porous yet densely packed, thermally stable electrodes. Ampcera solid electrolyte...
Newly Funded 2015 Materials-related Projects among the $125 Million DOE ARPA-E Awards
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On Nov. 23, 2015, U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz announced $125 million across 41 cutting-edge energy technologies awarded by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). Among these well-funded projects, the following ones are materials-related, each of them will receive multi-million dollars funding. MSE Supplies is a leading supplier of high quality materials and equipment for advanced materials research and manufacturing. Ultrahigh Efficiency Photovoltaics at Ultralow CostsNational Renewable Energy Laboratory | Golden, CO | $5,160,000 High Efficiency Alkaline Water Electrolyzers for Grid Scale Energy StorageDioxide Materials, Inc. | Boca Raton, FL | $2,000,000 Hydration-Free Conductive Membranes...
- Tags: Battery, Ceramics, Energy, FTO, Funding, ITO, Rare Earth, solar cells, Solid Electrolytes
Reinventing Lithium-ion Batteries to Reduce Costs and Boost Performance
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The advanced battery market has been among the fastest growing markets. Scientists and engineers are working extremely hard to make breakthroughs in battery performance. Companies, large and small, are investing heavily on commercializing the latest battery technologies to make them cost effective. MSE Supplies is a leading supplier of high quality anode, cathode and electrolyte materials for Lithium Ion Batteries research and manufacturing. MSE Supplies is a leading supplier of high quality anode, cathode and electrolyte materials for Lithium Ion Batteries research and manufacturing. The mobile world depends on lithium-ion batteries — today's ultimate rechargeable energy store. Last year, consumers bought five billion Li-ion cells...
State of the Art of Lithium Battery Research: Market Outlook and Research Reviews
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MSE Supplies is a leading supplier of high quality anode, cathode and electrolyte materials for Lithium Ion Batteries research and manufacturing. Lithium battery is no doubt a hot subject these days. The recent Battery Show held in Novi, MI on Sept. 15-17, 2015 featured speakers from battery companies, consumer electronics companies to automotive companies, which have all been investing heavily in the development of the next generation high performance Lithium batteries. While the 228th ECS Meeting is being held in Phoenix this week (Oct. 11-15, 2015), ECS published a collection of 21 review papers to highlight the state of the art of Lithium...
- Tags: Battery
The future of battery technology: Is the industry ready for disruption?
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Batteries are essential in our daily lives. They power our phones, cars and laptops, and there now exists an opportunity for them to power our homes and enterprise infrastructure. Yet while the technologies that rely on batteries are seeing revolutionary changes every year, we’re not seeing the same level of innovation for batteries. In fact, while there have been modest improvements to Lithium Ion technology, the Lithium Ion battery remains by and large very similar to when it was first commercialized in 1991. The slow advancement in battery technology begs the question, why haven’t we seen an evolution in battery...
- Tags: Battery