Sunday, April 30, 2017

Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars

Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars By Tim Harford BBC Word Service, 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy
  • 1 May 2017
  • From the section Business
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    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39420729 Read more about sharing. Close share panel Various batteriesImage copyright Getty Images

    Murderers in early 19th-Century London sometimes tried to kill themselves before they were hanged.

    Failing that, they asked friends to give their legs a good, hard pull as they dangled from the gallows to ensure their death. Their freshly hanged bodies, they knew, would be handed to scientists for anatomical studies.

    They didn't want to survive the hanging and regain consciousness while being dissected.

    If George Foster, executed in 1803, had woken up on the lab table, it would have been in particularly undignified circumstances.

    In front of an enthralled and slightly horrified London crowd, an Italian scientist with a flair for showmanship placed an electrode into Foster's rectum.

    Some onlookers thought Foster was waking up. The electrically charged probe caused his body to flinch and his fist to clench. Applied to his face, electrodes made his mouth grimace and an eye twitch open.

    The scientist had modestly assured his audience that he wasn't actually intending to bring Foster back to life, but added, "Who knows what might happen?"

    The police were on hand, in case Foster needed hanging again.

    Find out more

    50 Things That Made the Modern Economy highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations which have helped create the economic world we live in.

    It is broadcast on the BBC World Service. You can find more information about the programme's sources and listen online or subscribe to the programme podcast.

    Foster's body was being galvanised - a word coined for Luigi Galvani, the Italian scientist's uncle.

    In 1780s Italy, Galvani had discovered that touching the severed legs of a dead frog with two different types of metal caused the legs to jerk.

    Wrong in a useful way

    Galvani thought he had discovered "animal electricity", and his nephew was carrying on the investigations.

    Galvanism briefly fascinated the public, inspiring Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Galvani discovered frogs' legs would twitch when touched by electrodes

    Galvani was wrong. There is no animal electricity.

    You can't bring hanged bodies back to life, and Victor Frankenstein's monster remains safely in the realms of fiction.

    But Galvani was wrong in a useful way, because he showed his experiments to his friend Alessandro Volta, who had better intuition about what was going on.

    The important thing, Volta realised, wasn't that the frog flesh was of animal origin.

    It was that it contained fluids which conducted electricity, allowing a charge to pass between the different types of metal.

    When the two metals connected - Galvani's scalpel touching the brass hook on which the legs were hung - the circuit was complete, and a chemical reaction caused electrons to flow.

    Volta experimented with different combinations of metal and different substitutes for frogs' legs. In 1800, he showed that you could generate a constant, steady current by piling up sheets of zinc, copper and brine-soaked card board.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Alessandro Volta described his findings in a letter to the President of the Royal Society, Sir Joseph Banks, in March 1800

    Volta had invented the battery, and gave us a new word - volt. His insight won him admirers. Napoleon made him a count.

    The lithium breakthrough

    But it wasn't especially practical, not at first.

    The metals corroded, the salt water spilled, the current was short-lived, and it couldn't be recharged.

    It was 1859 before we got the first rechargeable battery, made from lead, lead dioxide and sulphuric acid. It was bulky, heavy, and acid sloshed out if you tipped it over. But it was useful - the same basic design still starts our cars.

    The first "dry" cells - the familiar modern battery - came in 1886. The next big breakthrough took another century.

    In 1985, Akira Yoshino patented the lithium-ion battery, later commercialised by Sony.

    Lithium was popular with researchers as it's very light and highly reactive: lithium-ion batteries can pack lots of power into a small space.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Lithium-ion batteries power many popular devices.

    Unfortunately, lithium also has an alarming tendency to explode when exposed to air and water, so it took some clever chemistry to make it acceptably stable.

    Without the lithium-ion battery, mobiles would likely have been much slower to catch on.

    Consider what cutting-edge battery technology looked like in 1985.

    Motorola had just launched the world's first mobile phone, the DynaTAC 8000x. Known affectionately as "the brick", it weighed nearly 1kg. Its talk time was 30 minutes.

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    The technology behind lithium-ion batteries has certainly improved: 1990s laptops were clunky and discharged rapidly. Today's sleek ultraportables will last for a long-haul flight.

    Still, battery life has impr oved at a much slower rate than other laptop components, such as memory and processing power.

    Where's the battery that's light and cheap, recharges in seconds, and never deteriorates with repeated use? We're still waiting.

    But there is no shortage of researchers looking for the next breakthrough.

    Some are developing "flow" batteries, which work by pumping charged liquid electrolytes.

    Image copyright Harvard SEAS Image caption Harvard researchers working on "flow" batteries have identified a new class of organic molecules, inspired by vitamin B2, that can safely store electricity

    Some are experimenting with new materials to combine with lithium, including sulphur and air. Some are using nanotechnology in the wires of electrodes to make batteries last longer.

    But history counsels caution: game changers haven't come along often.

    Can batteries boost the grid?

    In the coming decades, the truly revolutionary development in batteries may not be in the technology itself, but in its uses.

    We think of batteries as things that allow us to disconnect from the grid. We may soon see them as the thing that makes the grid work better.

    Gradually, the cost of renewable energy is coming down. But even cheap renewables pose a problem - they don't generate power all the time.

    You'll always have a glut of solar power on summer days and none on winter evenings. When the sun isn't shining and the wind isn't blowing, you need coal or gas or nuclear to keep the lights on, so why not run them all the time?

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Solar panels cannot deliver power all the time - even in sunny spots

    A recent study of south-eastern Arizona's grid weighed the costs of power cuts against the costs of CO2 emissions, and concluded that solar should provide just 20% of power. And Arizona is pretty sunny.

    Grids need better ways of storing energy to better exploit renewable power.

    One time-honoured solution is pumping water uphill when you have spare energy, and then - when you need more - letting it flow back down through a hydropower plant. But that requires conveniently contoured terrain.

    Could batteries be the solution?

    Perhaps. It depends partly on the extent to which regulators nudge the industry in that direction, and on how quickly battery costs come down.

    Elon Musk hopes they'll come down very quickly indeed.

    The entrepreneur behind electric car maker Tesla is building a gigantic lithium-ion battery factory in Nevada. Musk claims it will be the second-largest building in the world, after the one where Boeing manufactures it s 747s.

    Image copyright Reuters Image caption Quick-charging car batteries are essential for electric cars

    Tesla is betting that it can significantly wrestle down the costs of lithium-ion production, not through technological breakthroughs, but through sheer economies of scale.

    Tesla needs the batteries for its vehicles, of course. But it's also among the companies already offering battery packs to homes, businesses and power grids.

    If you have solar panels on your roof, a battery in your house gives you the option of storing your surplus day-time energy for night-time use, rather than selling it back to the grid.

    We're still a long way from a world in which electricity grids and transport networks can operate entirely on renewables and batteries.

    But in the race to limit climate change, the world needs something to galvanise it into action.

    The biggest impact of Alessandro Volta's invention may be only just beginning.

    Tim Harford writes the Financial Times's Undercover Economist column. 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy is broa dcast on the BBC World Service. You can find more information about the programme's sources and listen online or subscribe to the programme podcast.


    Source: Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars

    Saturday, April 29, 2017

    Electric Car Sales In Europe Nears Record Level In March

    Plug-In Electric Car Sales In Europe – March 2017

    Plug-in car sales for Europe so far in 2017 have given us a lot of satisfaction, as we not only see strong growth, but a return to near record levels normally reserved for the end of the year, when special forces are at work pushing the numbers higher.

    Renault-Nissan Alliance CEO Carlos Ghosn with Renault ZOE and Nissan LEAF

    For the month of March, nearly 29,000 plug-in cars were sold!

    And after first three months, the cumulative result now stands at some 65,000, putting the region on track for 250,000-300,000 sales this year.

    Over all the the automakers, the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance have the most reasons to be satisfied, and here is why:

  • Renault ZOE #1 – 3,762 (9,127 YTD)
  • Nissan LEAF #2 – 3,188 (5,911 YTD)
  • Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV #3 – 3,129 (5,375 YTD)
  • In fact, those three models were the most popular both for March, and for the calendar year to date.

    We should note that Tesla also excelled in March, taking the next two spots (#4 and #5), with 2,060 Model S sales and 2,016 Model X deliveries.

    The BMW i3 was sixth with 1,784 sales, but still retains the fourth spot overall  YTD (5,065).

    Plug-In Electric Car Sales In Europe – March 2017

    Source: EV Sales Blog


    Source: Electric Car Sales In Europe Nears Record Level In March

    Friday, April 28, 2017

    From England to Mongolia in an electric vehicle – what ‘range anxiety’ ? (w/VIDEO)

    Goodyear Duraplus

    'Range anxiety' is something which discourages many people from owning an electric vehicle (EV). It refers to the limited range that the EV can travel before recharging of the battery pack is needed to continue. Unlike running on petrol or diesel, to 'refuel' when running only on electricity requires a source of electricity – an electrical power point which is a recharging kiosk or even a normal 3-point outlet like what you have at home. Furthermore, while it doesn't take long to refuel, recharging takes a while although there are fast-chargers that can charge a battery pack to 80% within 30 minutes.

    Currently, most EVs have a range of 150 to 250 kms on a fully charged battery pack and that's if you drive at a moderate speed. So the thought of going from Kuala Lumpur to Penang with an EV may not be appealing as you will have to plan your journey so that you are able to get to a R&R to recharge – and expect to spend a while there.

    So imagine what it will be like driving from England to Mongolia – a distance of 16,000 kms. That's what EV advocate Plug In Adventures will be doing in the middle of this year. The organisation has created a specially modified Nissan LEAF that will be the first all-electric car to enter the Mongol Rally, a charity event which has been run annually since 2004.

    Dubbed the LEAF AT-EV (All Terrain Electric Vehicle), the vehicle is based on a standard 30-kWh LEAF which has a range of up to 250 kms on a full charge. Some modifications have been made to better equip the car once it reaches the more remote parts of the journey. More robust wheels and narrower tyres have been fitted and welded plates added to the underside of the wishbones. The standard brake lines have been replaced by braided ones so they won't get punctured easily on rough terrain and 6-mm thick aluminium sump guard adds further protection underneath.

    Mudflaps are also added, these not present in the standard car which needs the best aerodynamic efficiency possible. Mudflaps create some air resistance which would require extra energy to overcome.

    The rules state that participants must drive a small, sub-1.0-litre engine car as it will make the event more of a challenge with a greater chance of a breakdown meaning drivers can interact with locals along the way. The drive is unsupported with no 'on the road back-up.' This means that the participants are expected to get themselves out of trouble.

    A modified roof rack provides external storage and is fitted with a LED light bar to produce 16,400 lumens of supplementary low-voltage forward lighting during the remotest parts of the trip. That would certainly be vital as there will be areas with no street lights at all and perhaps not even a proper track.

    As the Mongol Rally isn't a timed race, the entrants' vehicles ideally provide long distance comfort. The interior modifications to the LEAF AT-EV have been focused on reducing weight and providing more storage space. The driver and front passenger area is unmodified apart from the addition of rubber floor mats. However, the rear row of seats and rear seatbelts have been completely removed, which eliminates 32 kgs and helps to offset the extra weight of modifications mentioned earlier

    "The Mongol Rally is our most challenging electric vehicle drive to date, but it's one we've been planning for a number of years. Not only will we face a dwindling number of EV chargers the further east we go, the terrain also becomes more difficult to navigate, "said Chris Ramsey, founder of Plug In Adventures.

    "Using a Nissan LEAF for this was an obvious decision though. I'm very familiar with the car, it's always been reliable and dependable for me, and it has the largest network of rapid charging options in Europe. As it will also accept a 240V connection even in the remote areas when my fast-charge options are gone, I can still charge the battery and keep moving. This journey is about the travel experience though, not reaching the destination in a fast time. I can't wait to get out on the road and introduce more people to the advantages of electric vehicles, whatever country they're from!"

    Ramsey plans to make regular stops along the way to promote the benefits of running an all-electric vehicle to residents of the countries he's passing through. He'll also be using the What3Words platform to log the locations of some of the uncharted charging network, so that future EV drivers traversing the region can benefit from accurate charging point locations.

    [Chips Yap]


    Source: From England to Mongolia in an electric vehicle – what 'range anxiety' ? (w/VIDEO)

    Thursday, April 27, 2017

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    Source: The Audi E-Tron Sportback Is the Electric Car We?ve Always Wanted