BURN: An Energy Journal

Scientific method: The search for a better battery

Marketplace Contributor Jan 2, 2013
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BURN: An Energy Journal

Scientific method: The search for a better battery

Marketplace Contributor Jan 2, 2013
HTML EMBED:
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There’s a fair chance you’re seeing this on one of your devices that runs on batteries. Not to sneer at your preferences in phones, tablets, laptops…whatever, but your battery sucks. It cost too much, doesn’t hold enough power, runs down too quickly. Also, it’s bad for the earth, loaded with toxins.

Our devices are smart, but the basic design of batteries is unchanged from over a couple of hundred years ago: charged particles called ions following circuits between layers of chemical elements. The materials get better — lithium-ion is an improvement over nickel-cadmium — but the architecture of how they work is fundamentally the same. Any real breakthrough for an energy future less dependent on fossil fuels becomes much more likely if we can make a better battery.

That’s why I wanted to talk with Amy Prieto.

“I’m a chemist; I’m a chemistry professor,” she says. “But I’ve also started a company that’s trying to design a new kind of rechargeable battery.”

I saw her at her lab at Colorado State University in Ft. Collins, where she teaches, conducts research and leads the Prieto Battery Company, founded with CSU. She didn’t know much about batteries when she started there a few years ago. And now she has a working prototype of what she calls a three-dimensional battery, with a core of copper foam.

“It’s just like a sponge, you could think about,” says Prieto. “Then we paint all the inside spaces with the different materials that you need for the battery. So the ions can go in many different directions, but they don’t have to go very far. So, that’s what I mean by a three-dimensional battery.”

The battery project is in development, and she has achieved significant innovations already, though it will be years — if ever — before one is available for that phone you can’t keep charged. But if she can get the architecture right, her battery could do a lot more than keep you talking all day. In a car, her battery could take you 300 miles, and then recharge in less than 10 minutes. That kind of performance would make a difference — people would be more likely to embrace electric cars if they provide the kind of range and performance we’re used to from the internal combustion engine.

Prof. Prieto has a ways to go…and a quiet confidence about her. It’s a matter of time, she says.

“I think everybody wants better devices,” says Prieto. “They want organic food. They want better treatment for diseases. But all of that takes fundamental research and that research takes quite a long time. I think communicating that sense of timing is very difficult. I’m not sure scientists necessarily do the best job of that.”


Batteries: The Unsung Hero of Modern Man — and How They Work

Batteries are everywhere and play an integral role in our lives. They’re also way under-appreciated. This video is a simple explanation of how the Unsung Hero of Modern Man actually works.

Learn more about Amy Prieto and the quest to build better batteries at BURN: An Energy Journal.

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