Thursday, November 12, 2009


Here is the technological advance we were talking about in "Lithium: Battery Of The Future" with billions invested every year advance on technological side is very impressive: industry insiders are expecting capacity of lithium-ion batteries to double with cost going down by half in the next five years.
"Lithium batteries has become an industry standard for Electric Cars, with billions invested in research, development and production facilities lithium-ion storage energy systems becomes an anchoring technology for the next stage of innovation in green mobility."





November 12, 2009 - 3:01PM
A new technology to prevent lithium-ion batteries from catching fire or exploding in laptops and mobile phones may be on the market as soon as the first quarter of 2010, its inventor said on Wednesday.
The invention, called Stoba, was developed at the Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), Taiwan's national research organisation.
When lithium-ion batteries develop internal shorts they can quickly heat up to as much as 500 degrees centigrade and catch fire or explode.
Stoba sits between the positive and negative sides of the battery and when the battery hits 130 degrees centigrade, Stoba transforms from a porous material to a film and shuts down the reaction.
"We have introduced a totally new material to the battery," said Alex Pang, the senior researcher who led a team that developed the new material over four years.
The danger of exploding lithium batteries is so great that last month the US Transportation Department issued a "hazardous materials" notice.
"Many persons who ship lithium batteries do not recognise the hazards... fires in aircraft can result in catastrophic events presenting unique challenges not encountered in other transport modes," the government said.
Pang said battery makers in Taiwan are in the testing stage and have ramped up manufacturing of Stoba-equipped cells to the thousands. They expect to begin shipping in the first quarter of 2010, he said.
Pang said by phone that Stoba will add only two per cent to three per cent to the cost of manufacture. He said he wants to try selling the technology to major laptop and phone manufacturers."

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