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posted by janrinok on Friday August 21 2020, @08:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the charge! dept.

Super-dense lithium-sulfur battery gives electric plane a 230-mile range:

British company Oxis says it's developed safe, high-density lithium-sulfur battery chemistry and will supply Texas Aircraft Manufacturing with a 90-kWh, next-gen battery pack to power the eColt, an electric aircraft with a two hour, 230-mile range.

[...] In practice, they have had issues – notably with the old chestnut of dendrite formation, in which ion deposits on the anode grow into long spikes of conductive material that short circuit the cell and cause it to catch fire. The lithium-metal anodes also tend to degrade in less dangerous ways that eventually just make the batteries die.

In a piece written for IEEE Spectrum, Oxis head of battery development Mark Crittenden details how his team is addressing these problems with a thin layer of ceramic material at the anode, and it's resulting in high-energy cells with significantly longer lifespans than previous Li-S designs.

"Typical lithium-ion designs can hold from 100 to 265 Wh/kg, depending on the other performance characteristics for which it has been optimized, such as peak power or long life," writes Crittenden. "Oxis recently developed a prototype lithium-sulfur pouch cell that proved capable of 470 Wh/kg, and we expect to reach 500 Wh/kg within a year. And because the technology is still new and has room for improvement, it's not unreasonable to anticipate 600 Wh/kg by 2025."

Still needs work on the limited number of number of charge cycles.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Saturday August 22 2020, @02:36PM

    by VLM (445) on Saturday August 22 2020, @02:36PM (#1040384)

    Air Freight don't care as long as Amazon centers are less than 230 miles apart.

    I suspect you'll see this for stuff like Amazon Fresh produce. Why would Amazon pay downtown Chicago warehouse food dealer middlemen prices for fresh blueberries when they can fly blueberries direct off the fields in Michigan for zero fuel cost?

    Crappy logistics with tons of slow moving middlemen get me decent edible Florida oranges today. Who knows what'll happen when Amazon logistics meets cheap electric air freight. An obvious example is I'd be wary of online delivery of fresh seafood right now. But if Amazon could guarantee my seafood was in the ocean less than six hours before it landed on my porch ...

    The 2020s look to be a bad time to be a middleman in general.

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