hardworkingstiff
Senior Member
- Location
- Wilmington, NC
Could this be the product we've been waiting for to address the storage problems for solar and wind power generation?
The article says there is still some concern about leakage. It seems (to me) to be an approach that if refined could be just what we are looking for to make solar and wind viable without so much standby traditional generation.
http://www.technologyreview.com/business/18086/page1/
On the other hand, EEStor's system--called an Electrical Energy Storage Unit, or EESU--is based on an ultracapacitor architecture that appears to escape the traditional limitations of such devices. The company has developed a ceramic ultracapacitor with a barium-titanate dielectric, or insulator, that can achieve an exceptionally high specific energy--that is, the amount of energy in a given unit of mass.
For example, the company's system claims a specific energy of about 280 watt hours per kilogram, compared with around 120 watt hours per kilogram for lithium-ion and 32 watt hours per kilogram for lead-acid gel batteries. This leads to new possibilities for electric vehicles and other applications, including for the military.
The article says there is still some concern about leakage. It seems (to me) to be an approach that if refined could be just what we are looking for to make solar and wind viable without so much standby traditional generation.
http://www.technologyreview.com/business/18086/page1/