Slick Sheet: Project
General Electric (GE) Global Research is developing low-cost, thin-film sensors that enable real-time mapping of temperature and surface pressure for each cell within a battery pack, which could help predict how and when batteries begin to fail. The thermal sensors within today's best battery packs are thick, expensive, and incapable of precisely assessing important factors like temperature and pressure within their cells.

Slick Sheet: Project
Gayle Technologies is developing a laser-guided, ultrasonic electric vehicle battery inspection system that would help gather precise diagnostic data on battery performance. The batteries used in hybrid vehicles are highly complex, requiring advanced management systems to maximize their performance. Gayle's laser-guided, ultrasonic system would allow for diagnosis of various aspects of the battery system, including inspection for defects during manufacturing and assembly, battery state-of-health, and flaws that develop from mechanical or chemical issues with the battery system during use.

Slick Sheet: Project
Ford Motor Company is developing a commercially viable battery tester with measurement precision that is significantly better than today's best battery testers. Improvements in the predictive ability of battery testers would enable significant reductions in the time and expense involved in electric vehicle technology validation. Unfortunately, the instrumental precision required to reliably predict performance of batteries after thousands of charge and discharge cycles does not exist in today's commercial systems.

Slick Sheet: Project
There is a constant demand for better performing, more compact, lighter-weight, and lower-cost electronic devices. Unfortunately, the materials traditionally used to make components for electronic devices have reached their limits. Case Western Reserve University is developing capacitors made of new materials that could be used to produce the next generation of compact and efficient high-powered consumer electronics and electronic vehicles. A capacitor is an important component of an electronic device.

Slick Sheet: Project
City University of New York (CUNY) Energy Institute is developing less expensive, more efficient, smaller, and longer-lasting power converters for energy-efficient LED lights. LEDs produce light more efficiently than incandescent lights and last significantly longer than compact fluorescent bulbs, but they require more sophisticated power converter technology, which increases their cost. LEDs need more sophisticated converters because they require a different type of power (low-voltage direct current, or DC) than what’s generally supplied by power outlets.

Blog Posts
When Hurricane Maria struck the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico last September, it took the entire island’s power grid with it. Today, over 95 percent of the island has its power restored, but the rebuilding process is far from finished. Over the long term, many challenges remain — along with some big opportunities to make the grid smarter and more resilient.

Press Releases
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced up to $30 million in funding for projects as part of a new Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) program: Duration Addition to electricitY Storage (DAYS). DAYS project teams will build innovative technologies to enable long-duration energy storage on the power grid, providing reliable electricity for 10 to approximately 100 hours. 

Impact Sheet
PROTON-CONDUCTING FUEL CELLS FOR STATIONARY POWER UPDATED: December 11, 2017PROJECT TITLE: Low-Cost Intermediate-Temperature Fuel-Flexible Protonic-Ceramic Fuel Cell and StackPROGRAM: Reliable Electricity Based on ELectrochemical Systems (REBELS)AWARD: $3,997,457PROJECT TEAM: Colorado School of Mines (Lead), FuelCell EnergyPROJECT TERM: October 2014 – September 2020 

Impact Sheet
IRON SLURRY FOR LONGER DURATION FLOW BATTERY UPDATED: January 21, 2018 PROJECT TITLE: High Energy Storage Capacity Low Cost Iron Flow BatteryPROGRAM: OPEN 2012AWARD: $3,247,909TEAM: Case Western Reserve University (CWRU)TERM: January 2013 – March 2018PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Robert Savinell

Impact Sheet
ADVANCED THERMAL BATTERY FOR CLIMATE CONTROL UPDATED:  JANUARY 25, 2017PROJECT TITLE: Advanced Thermo-Adsorptive Battery Climate Control SystemPROGRAM: High Energy Advanced Thermal Storage (HEATS) AWARD: $3,556,689PROJECT TEAM: MIT (Lead), Northeastern University, UT-Austin, U.C. Berkeley, Ford Motor CompanyPROJECT TERM: December 2011 – September 2016