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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Tokyo Tech

J-Battery Tech Saves the World

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J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Russell » Wed May 14, 2014 2:20 am

The Organic Battery From Japan That Could Spawn The Next Tesla

A startup says its new battery will make cheap, 300-mile-range electric cars as common as Corollas

Dou Kani, the chief executive of Power Japan Plus, pushes what looks to be a standard lithium-ion battery across a conference table, the type of battery that powers everything from $30 flashlights to $90,000 electric cars.

Except the silver cylinder contains no lithium. Nor any expensive rare earth metals. It won’t catch fire if punctured. And unlike lithium ion batteries, it can be charged and discharged thousands of times without losing its energy capacity, its creator claims. Oh, and Power Japan Plus’ battery also generates more power than a lithium battery and can charge 20 times as fast.

Translation: Cheaper long-range electric cars that can travel hundreds of miles on a charge and be juiced up in minutes rather than hours.

[...]

“We have ambitious claims,” Chris Craney, Power Japan Plus’s chief marketing officer, told The Atlantic in something of an understatement last week when the company’s top executives visited San Francisco to unveil the technology ahead of an announcement today. “If there’s an [electric vehicle] company that wants to climb to the Tesla level, we’d be a good company to talk to.”

The secret ingredient in the Japanese startup’s battery breakthrough? Cotton. Organic cotton, to be precise.

Yes, the same stuff that goes into your eco-conscious T-shirt. Except Power Japan Plus modifies the structure of the cotton’s carbon fiber to “create unique properties not seen in other carbon fiber ever developed.” The result – what the company calls a Carbon Complex– form the anode and cathode of its Ryden dual carbon battery, with an organic electrolyte as the conducting fluid. (Ryden is the English translation of the Japanese characters that mean god of lightning.)

The batteries operate at a steady temperature, meaning expensive cooling systems are not needed when they’re packaged into battery packs for electric cars.

Craney declined to reveal the cost of the Ryden battery. "I can’t give the numbers as that’s proprietary," he says. "But we’re not using anything but carbon."

The technology was pioneered by scientists at Japan's Kyushu University in in the late 1970s, according to Craney. Veterans of NTT and other Japanese corporations founded Power Japan Plus to commercialize dual carbon batteries and have spent the last six-and-a-half years perfecting the technology.

[...]

Executives say the company has built a pilot production line in Okinawa that will begin manufacturing 500 to 5,000 batteries a month later this year.

Power Japan Plus plans to sell batteries for use in electronic devices but would collaborate with electric carmakers and license the technology to their battery makers, earning royalties and consulting fees, according to Craney.

Hurdles remain, to say the least. The technology has yet to be proved effective in electric cars, though the company said it will demonstrate that capability later this year.

“To be bold, we are confident we are a major solution for the current electric vehicle industry,” says Craney.

More

Time to invest in a cotton farm...
Image ― Voltaire
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“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.” ― Albert Einstein
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Coligny » Wed May 14, 2014 2:27 am

I have a bridge to sell you, it's a really good bridge...
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

ni oubli ni pardon

never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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But hey, we can dream, can't we?

Postby Taro Toporific » Wed May 14, 2014 10:03 am

Coligny wrote:I have a bridge to sell you, it's a really good bridge...
Hey you, get off of my cloud.
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby wagyl » Wed May 14, 2014 11:22 am

The requirement that the cotton be "organic" fails my sniff test. Is there something intrinsic about cotton grown with chemical fertilisers which makes the carbon atoms different?

Also someone needs to tell the Atlantic about the difference between translation and transliteration.
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Wage Slave » Wed May 14, 2014 12:36 pm

wagyl wrote:The requirement that the cotton be "organic" fails my sniff test. Is there something intrinsic about cotton grown with chemical fertilisers which makes the carbon atoms different?

Also someone needs to tell the Atlantic about the difference between translation and transliteration.


And paraphrase.

But yeah, what possible difference could it make whether the cotton is organic in the foodie sense or not? Home brew STAP cells all over again - They really must stop doing this.
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Russell » Wed May 14, 2014 6:14 pm

I just wonder what they mean by the carbon fiber in cotton.

There is no carbon fiber in cotton, so they probably mean carbon atoms.

Anyway, if it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is.

But you never know...
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Mike Oxlong » Fri Apr 03, 2015 3:29 pm

Japan's Battery-Powered Recovery
As Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe looks for ways to reboot Abenomics, he could do worse than heed the advice of Kurt Kelty. Delivering a public speech on a recent Friday evening in Osaka, Tesla's director of battery technology captured all that's wrong with the Japanese economy. "We need to take risks, otherwise there will be no prosperity in business,” Kelty said in fluent Japanese. “We take risks, but it seems not the case in Japan.”

Japanese are often sensitive when outsiders (known as gaijin) criticize their country, but Kelty's criticisms couldn't be ignored. He's a 15-year veteran of the revered energy solutions lab at Panasonic, Japan's iconic electronic companies.

Panasonic, in fact, was an exception to Kelty's tough love remarks -- which is no accident. Tesla recently announced that it's partnering with the company in creating a so-called gigafactory to produce high-tech car batteries.

Panasonic is the rare Japanese company that has taken chances and profited from them. Started in 1918 in a two-story home in Osaka, it eventually became a multinational electronics powerhouse. After falling behind Apple and Samsung in recent years, it eventually made a decisive pivot -- in 2013, it abandoned the plasma television market and began focusing on batteries and solar panels. That decision paid off massively with the Tesla partnership.

Tesla isn't alone in tapping Japan's tech prowess. Apple, for example, is opening a new research and development center in Yokohama. But Tesla is spotlighting Japan's most lucrative future industry. Since the late 1970s, when Kyushu University helped develop the dual carbon battery, Japan has been a leader in the field. And demand for batteries is expected to soar in the years ahead, with high-range batteries expected to replace fossil fuels in cars, airplanes, ships and even buildings. In addition to helping save the planet, they could also help save Japan's economy.

Politically, the timing of Tesla's Japan collaboration couldn't be better. With executives of Japan’s biggest companies predicting deteriorating growth and more deflation this year, Abe can evoke the partnership to get his economic program (known as Abenomics) back on track.

Since taking office in December 2012, Abe has increased public-works spending and engineered a 29 percent drop in the yen. But he's made scant headway in increasing Japan's competitiveness or in cultivating a more entrepreneurial culture that creates wealth and attracts investment. As Kelty pointed out in his speech, Japan has all the ingredients for success -- just not the policies to realize it.

Abe should seize the opportunity to announce new tax incentives for startups, especially in the renewable energy sector -- batteries, solar, wind and geothermal power. The government should also create a series of venture-capital pools and safety nets that support would-be innovators and incentivize them to take risks, and sponsor training programs to inspire more entrepreneurship among young Japanese. Next, he should then accelerate his government's timetable for launching so-called special-enterprise zones where businesses wouldn't be subject to red tape. Better yet, Abe could push to cut red tape from the entire economy.

A renewable-energy boom would do for Japan what quantitative easing can't: produce a thriving economic ecosystem that creates wealth, jobs and international esteem. And Japan is perfectly suited to profit from the demand for better batteries. Japanese companies have a track record for delivering quality and delivering it on time. Tesla, after all, could have gone to China for copy-cat technology, but it knew it would be better served in Japan.

As for Abe, he should be evoking Panasonic at every opportunity; it offers a clear example of how the Japanese economy can recharge its own battery.

http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2 ... d-recovery
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Re: J-Battery Tech Saves the World

Postby Mike Oxlong » Sun Apr 05, 2015 10:18 am

Tesla Pushes Japanese Suppliers as It Seeks Battery Partners
A Tesla Motors Inc. battery executive courted partners in Japan for its so-called gigafactory, praising local companies for top-notch quality and technology while cautioning against slow decision-making and risk aversion.

Japan ranks behind only North America as a source of parts for the maker of the Model S electric sedan, Kurt Kelty, Tesla’s director of battery technology, said Friday in Osaka. While he said that Tesla looks to Japan for the world’s most advanced technology, including electric components and displays, he also alluded to weaknesses, without naming specific companies.

“We need to take risks, otherwise there will be no prosperity in business,” Kelty said at an event hosted by the Osaka Business and Investment Center. “We take risks, but it seems not the case in Japan.”

Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk wants to transform Tesla into more of a mass-market automaker by building a battery-cell factory big enough to supply 500,000 vehicles by 2020. The Palo Alto, California-based company is counting on close proximity of suppliers and economies of scale to reduce battery costs by 30 percent and let Tesla sell a $35,000 electric Model 3.

Tesla has so far joined with larger, established Japanese companies, such as Panasonic Corp. and Denso Corp., Kelty said. The automaker is open to relationships with small and medium-size suppliers with good technology, he said.

Kelty said Japanese suppliers Tesla has worked with have shown strength in meeting commitments for parts delivery. At the same time, he said that moving too slowly has been a weakness among such companies.

Another Test

“Decision-making often takes time,” Kelty said. “For example, when the product is almost ready, they may want to do the test again.”

Panasonic, Tesla’s battery-cell supplier, this week forecast a 23 percent increase in profit in the fiscal year that begins next month as the Osaka-based electronics maker expands its automotive business.

The company has declined to confirm how much it will invest in Tesla’s gigafactory. Musk has estimated that Panasonic’s contribution will be $1.5 billion to $2 billion.

Kelty said Tesla once asked for a production increase from a Japanese supplier, which resisted and suggested the automaker slow its expansion plan. He didn’t identify the supplier.

“We’re a growing company, and therefore we need to put pressure on the suppliers, so the suppliers need to grow as well,” he said.

Chieko Gyobu, a Panasonic spokeswoman based in Tokyo, wouldn’t comment on Kelty’s remarks when reached by phone. Hironori Yoshida, a spokesman for Kariya, Japan-based Denso, also declined to comment.

Kelty worked more than 14 years for Panasonic before joining Tesla in March 2006. He is the lead negotiator with Panasonic to determine their partnership at the gigafactory, according to his LinkedIn profile.

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