The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) has awarded US$250,000 to each of eight companies and research centres to develop working prototypes for a range of energy storage technologies. The recipients are all members of the NY Battery and Energy Storage Technology (NY-BEST) consortium, which is working to establish New York as a global leader in energy storage technology for heavy-duty transport equipment, electric grid and other energy storage applications.
The companies and research centres – in Albany, Ithaca, New York City, Oneonta, Schenectady, Troy and Williamsville – will each receive US$250,000 provided by NYSERDA to turn energy storage technologies with proven technical feasibility into working prototypes. Under the terms of these awards, each recipient must match NYSERDA’s funding, leveraging NYSERDA’s US$2m with a total of US$2.5m in additional private investment. This is the first of three rounds of funding to help members of NY-BEST move promising technologies towards commercialisation.
The companies and research centres receiving funding include:
- Custom Electronics Inc. (Oneonta), which seeks to develop an energy-storage device known as a graphene electrolytic capacitor to provide extra energy to ride through power sags, swells, or momentary electric interruptions.
- E2TAC (Albany), which seeks to enhance lithium-ion capacitors for improved short-term energy storage for applications ranging from hybrid vehicles to power electronics. E2TAC (Energy and Environmental Technology Applications Center) is located at the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) of the University at Albany.
- GE Energy Storage (Schenectady), which seeks to work with Raymond Corp. of Greene to develop an electric forklift for use in freezer warehouses using GE’s Durathon batteries. These could replace conventional lead-acid batteries, which work poorly in cold temperatures.
- Graphene Devices Ltd. (Williamsville/Rochester), which seeks to develop graphene-based high energy ultracapacitors with three times the energy density of current commercial devices at the same cost. Applications include smart grid devices and the use of energy storage for hybrid vehicles.
- Ioxus Inc. (Oneonta), which will continue development of its advanced ultracapacitors. Ultracapacitors can assist with numerous applications including transportation by storing energy generated by braking and discharging that energy back to assist with acceleration and in wind turbine pitch control.
- Paper Battery Co. (Troy), which seeks to develop a production prototype of its thin and flexible ultracapacitor to provide temporary backup power in computing applications.
- Primet Precision Materials Inc. (Ithaca), which seeks to lower the manufacturing cost of key raw materials for lithium-ion batteries. These could allow more integration of lower-cost energy storage into the electric grid which could bring lower-cost, reliable electricity to ratepayers.
- Urban Electric Power Inc. (New York City), which is seeking to store a megawatt-hour worth of power in a “flow-assisted” zinc battery that uses an advanced battery management system – enough to power 40 homes for a day. The stored energy would be used to reduce peak power demand in the city. The project is being developed in conjunction with the CUNY Energy Institute.