Google's Project Ara is an effort to create a modular smartphone. Users can dynamically swap hardware modules to upgrade or alter the configuration of the phone. It is scheduled to debut in Puerto Rico in the second half of 2015 for testing. Now SolidEnergy has announced a high-density battery module for the platform:
Module makers for Project Ara are already lining up to create third-party modules for the platform, and one of the more interesting ones is SolidEnergy, which promises to make revolutionary batteries that have twice the capacity of current batteries.
SolidEnergy is an MIT startup with $4.5 million in funding, and it has 12 employees who have been working on this new technology for the past three years. The company has developed an ultra-thin metal anode that has twice the density of the graphite and silicon anodes commonly used in smartphone batteries."Our battery basically makes the Project Ara phone more practical," said SolidEnergy founder and CEO Dr. Qichao Hu in an interview. "Right now, one of the major challenges with this phone is that the battery life is too short."
Because the company can just sell its own battery modules to consumers and because its batteries can store twice as much energy than the competitors, SolidEnergy has chosen to make batteries for Project Ara at first. Project Ara only has room for so many modules, and the battery module isn't particularly large in size. That makes high storage capacity very compelling. SolidEnergy will begin commercializing its own batteries in 2016. Batteries targeted at electric vehicles will follow in 2017.
(Score: 2) by meisterister on Wednesday February 04 2015, @02:04AM
After reading above, it appears that these batteries can store twice as much energy in the same volume as other "normal" batteries.
Forget the flipping phone! When will this come to laptops? It would be nice to either have double the time on a charge or far more capacity for TDP (I understand that keeping a laptop cool is a major concern, but tell that to the people who had Pentium 4 laptops back in the day).
(May or may not have been) Posted from my K6-2, Athlon XP, or Pentium I/II/III.