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Brazilian, US companies join to push for niobium technology for lithium-ion batteries

Niobium oxide. (Image by ).

Brazilian niobium producer Companhia Brasileira de Metalurgia e Minera莽茫o (CBMM) recently announced that it had acquired 20% of US-based start-up Battery Streak with the goal of accelerating new technologies that employ niobium in the production of lithium-ion batteries.  

According to Rodrigo Amado, CBMM鈥檚 strategy and new businesses manager, the company is convinced that developing materials for battery technology is a very promising segment that should represent 25% of its revenue by 2030.

鈥淲e are working intensely with large partners to offer to the market, mainly for the automotive sector, batteries with unique characteristics, such as ultra-fast recharging, in less than 10 minutes, greater stability and safety,鈥 Amado said in a media statement. 鈥淏attery Streak is fully aligned with this goal and will allow us to take an important step, allowing applications beyond the mobility market.鈥 

Battery Streak鈥檚 patented technology is called 鈥渕esoporous pseudocapacitive material鈥 and it uses nanostructured niobium oxide as the anode in lithium-ion batteries. In detail, the solution allows for the production of electrodes that work much like a sponge, with pores thousands of times smaller than a human hair, providing a very large surface area for energy storage but bringing close together the electrolyte and electrode material, which means that the physical transport distance of ions is very short. When energy is released, thus, there is no chemical phase change and virtually no heat is produced.

鈥淭he chemical reaction [common in other lithium-ion batteries] is not efficient and thus heat is produced as a byproduct,鈥 Matt Lai, Battery Streak鈥檚 technology development manager, said. 鈥淥ur batteries do not store energy with such chemical reactions. Instead, the energy is stored on a surface without chemical phase change, like a capacitor.鈥

According to Lai, this technology results in very fast charging, with most devices going from empty to 80% charge in 10 minutes, while also remaining cool to the touch.

鈥淲hile everyone wants a faster-charging battery, from a safety standpoint the heat generated while charging is just as important. Battery Streak testing consistently shows that the company鈥檚 batteries charge between 80.6掳F (27掳C) and 91掳F (33掳C), well below temperatures that could generate enough heat to cause batteries to catch fire,鈥 the executive said.

Lai pointed out that even though the company makes batteries on a prototype basis, going to market it expects to be selling more materials than actual batteries.

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