Are Flow Batteries The Answer to Long-term, Seasonal Energy Storage?

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июл 2024
  • Meeting our energy needs with renewables is going to require some pretty substantial storage solutions. Luckily, there are plenty of new technologies based on very old ideas, such as flow batteries which were first patented in 1879, are plugging the gaps! Australia's Redflow is one such company leveraging the power of the flow battery and claims its Zinc Bromine technology is one of the world's safest, easily scalable and most sustainable storage options going. Sounds too good to be true?! Join Robert as he meets the team to find out!
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    00:00 Longer Term Energy Storage
    02:05 How does it work?
    04:00 Why is it called redflow?!
    06:00 Are flow batteries impacted by temperature?
    07:30 How does it compare?
    09:38 Simple manufacturing
    10:00 Fully charged stack
    11:30 Concluding thoughts
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Комментарии • 667

  • @BillCarlson
    @BillCarlson Год назад +413

    I do wish the stats for the battery had been covered in the episode, but I was able to find it online. The battery shown is the Redflow ZBM3 battery. It holds 10kWh @ 48V and power is 3kW (0.3C), and it weighs 530 pounds (240kg). The final spec that I really really need to know is the cost!! I'm expecting somewhere in the range of $5k - $10k to be competitive with LiFe batteries. Obviously main cons here are weight related, so power density per kg and energy density per kg. For reference my Chevy Bolt battery weighs about 1000 pounds (so, two of these) and holds 66kWh (3.3x as energy dense) and can provide >150kW of power (>25x as power dense).

    • @gbulmer
      @gbulmer Год назад +3

      What voltage does your Chevy Bolt battery produce?
      (I understand Power = Voltage x Current, so I am interested to know the voltage)
      Best Wishes. ☮

    • @rocksfire4390
      @rocksfire4390 Год назад +113

      Bill Carlson
      these are not made to go into anything that moves. they are to be setup in buildings or outside and stay there until they need to be replaced.

    • @pauld3327
      @pauld3327 Год назад +17

      A Standard range Tesla Model 3 with a 60 kWh battery pack is $43,000. Let's say the battery pack makes up for half the price of the car, you pay $21,500 for a 60 kWh battery pack. That's $358 / kHw.
      If this battery wants to be competitive with LFP batteries, It needs to be less than $3000 for 10 kWh.

    • @mjp0815
      @mjp0815 Год назад +2

      Cheers

    • @koenraad4618
      @koenraad4618 Год назад +83

      The number of recharge cycli before the battery deteriorates is an important figure in battery comparison. If the red-flow battery can do 10 times more recharge cycli than Li-ion (LiFP for instance), then it is a much cheaper energy storage technology considering the life span of the battery. The red-flow battery is not suitable of mobile applications.

  • @aigarius
    @aigarius Год назад +43

    The big problem with this tech is that it is not *really* a flow battery. What people actually think of as a flow battery is an energy storage system where the active part (plates in the case) do *not* change in any way during charge/discharge process. If all chemical changes are contained in the fluid(s), then a battery capacity can be scaled trivially by making the tanks bigger. It doesn't work that way here because the plates get loaded with zink while charging and thus there is a maximum amount of liquid that one plate can process.

    • @adz574
      @adz574 Год назад +4

      only matters if it's difficult to expand the number of plates, doesn't sound like that's the case

    • @williambridgman7365
      @williambridgman7365 Год назад

      I was just thinking the same thing and wondering if this would effect the easy scaling. Thanks for answering this question. This really limits the cheap scaling of this battery. Other forms of flow battery can be scaled very cheaply with tank size increase.

    • @mindwarp4818
      @mindwarp4818 Год назад

      I believe it’s a hybrid flow battery from what I’ve heard being discussed.

    • @Charvak-Atheist
      @Charvak-Atheist 24 дня назад

      Yeah,
      But if it's cheap then it's okay

  • @JohnnyWednesday
    @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +56

    I love how honest and open this man from Redflow is - lovely chap!

    • @absolute___zero
      @absolute___zero Год назад +1

      if he is so honest, why didn´t he tell us that bromine is very toxic and dangerous element? a little error in bromine capturing agent added to the electrolyte , and people will die if leak occurs. The only best battery is silver-zinc, it is not toxic, you can manufacture it at home, and you won't need to pay thousands of bucks to battery manufacturers.

    • @daansteeman5227
      @daansteeman5227 Год назад +1

      @@absolute___zero That was something I noticed to. Zink isn't that bad, but bromine is scary stuff. To be fair, the natural gas everybody has in their home here is flamable as hell (pun inteded). But bromine is nothing to scoff at... I'd be interested to see what happens when something goes wrong with this. He is a lot more open about how and what than I would have thought. But the "its water with a few non toxic things added" was a bit..... To easily said I think. Perhaps he's correct (he obviously knows a lot more about it then me). But he also does have his product on the line. So a second opinion might be nice...

  • @rolexcel
    @rolexcel Год назад +58

    Great to see the progress being made by Redflow. I have been following them for years. My view is that we should save lithium for mobile applications where lower weight / higher energy density is critical and use other technologies such as flow batteries and Liquid Metal batteries (invented by Professor Donald Sadoway from MIT now being developed by Ambri) for static applications where weight and volume are not critical. This would help with both supply and prices for both. Flow batteries using cheaper materials need to scale up rapidly to lower their prices and should become much more competitive.
    Also of interest in Australia:
    The vanadium redox flow battery was developed by emeritus professor Maria Skyllas-Kazacos st the University of NSW in Sydney but unfortunately has not been commercialised much here in Australia yet. Large grid scale batteries using this technology have reached up to 400 MWh in China.
    Thomas Maschmeyer at the University of Sydney has developed a non flow zinc bromine battery that replaces the liquid with a gel and is now being commercialised by Gelion and interestingly can be manufactured in existing lead acid battery factories. Would be great if this could also be featured on the Fully Charged Show!

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Год назад +3

      And really put a lot of effort in recycling of lithium batteries.

    • @krrk6337
      @krrk6337 Год назад +1

      So we've been following the same things really. I'm curious about Sadoway's battery though because I barely seen in media coverage lately (post-covid).

    • @TroySavary
      @TroySavary Год назад +3

      Totally agree. Lithium is the worst choice for stationary storage.

    • @wlhgmk
      @wlhgmk Год назад +1

      The use of non Li batteries for static applications would bring down the price of EVs and speed their adoption.

    • @charlestoast4051
      @charlestoast4051 Год назад

      @@wlhgmk In theory yes, but in reality EV prices will always be kept artificially high, and as soon as they are adopted on a wide scale, EV owners will be taxed to the hilt.

  • @mev202
    @mev202 Год назад +31

    Rob, along with most of us who watched this video, nods along like he fully understands it all. When in reality, we're all going...eh...yer, sure, that's how it works.

    • @zygmuntthecacaokakistocrat6589
      @zygmuntthecacaokakistocrat6589 Год назад +4

      It's not that hard. When this compound is formed, it absorbs electrical energy. When it breaks down, it releases energy (electrons). Applying an electrical load releases electrons, which makes them flow/vibrate along conductors.

    • @sahastradhara
      @sahastradhara Год назад

      @@zygmuntthecacaokakistocrat6589 and we are going ...eh .....yer, sure that's how it works again

    • @javelinXH992
      @javelinXH992 Год назад +9

      Don’t worry, I work in the electroplating industry. It does make sense, and is basically electroplating. This is good tech, relatively simple tech at it’s heart, smartly re-engineered for the modern world. Simple, cost effective, cheap materials, readily available and understood. No significant fire issues and relatively safe chemicals. No good for cars, but brilliant for fixed storage. Ideal for factories, buildings with basements etc. I would happily have this at my home, in my garage for example.

    • @nelsoncasquinha
      @nelsoncasquinha Год назад

      Can we connect this to an inverter like the sun2000 from Huawei or any other one alike? This is very nice, especially by having twice the capacity on the same volume and being able to simulate different types of battery.

    • @royharkins7066
      @royharkins7066 Год назад

      Lol I keep seeing Crichton, he’s a lovely bloke , makes us larf loads……pushing the spear deeper into I. C. E. with every show 😂❤😂

  • @Danger_mouse
    @Danger_mouse Год назад +141

    This makes me proud as an Australian to see stuff being made here 👍

    • @HaakonOfTheShadows
      @HaakonOfTheShadows Год назад +12

      Designed and researched in Australia. Made overseas. At least the high value work is being done here.

    • @Danger_mouse
      @Danger_mouse Год назад

      @@HaakonOfTheShadows
      Typical, that's less than impressive 😏

    • @toby9999
      @toby9999 Год назад +1

      ​It's impressive regardless of where they manufacture.

    • @Danger_mouse
      @Danger_mouse Год назад +4

      @@toby9999 Another case of our great tech and ideas, sent off to somewhere else to get made and not benifit our own country.
      Impressive, tech yes.

    • @ahrenadams
      @ahrenadams Год назад +11

      @@Danger_mouse You talking about the South African in charge :)

  • @Creepy-Girl
    @Creepy-Girl Год назад +20

    Energy Storage really is an important part of the future and it's great to see that Redflow is trying to solve this.
    I would love for Fully Charged to cover the Swedish company Azelio as well. They use aluminium to store energy as heat and then they can transform heat into energy and also use the extra heat to warm up areas.

  • @morosis82
    @morosis82 Год назад +8

    A friend of mine worked very high up in Redflow for a few years, a super interesting company, and has some quirky advantages over lithium ion that they've found some markets like.
    Unfortunate that they're expensive, but I hope that in time and with scale, they can bring that down. Their advantage is the longevity of life so it can be amortised over a much longer period than lithium.

    • @omargoodman2999
      @omargoodman2999 Год назад +4

      That's the Achilles's Heel of any innovative technological application. It's very expensive for what it offers to start off, so it really relies on people willing to pay that premium price early on to give them what they need to scale and expand. But, unfortunately, what often happens is that lots of people stand on the sidelines and say, "I'm not sure this will go anywhere. I'll wait until it proves itself and the costs come down before I put my money into it." And then, when it ends up falling through because _everyone_ did that, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy; "See, I told you it wasn't going anywhere. I'm glad I didn't waste my money on that."

  • @dmcarstensen
    @dmcarstensen Год назад +5

    I'd love to see these come out for residential battery storage systems. I'd happily use one of these as a method of storing my solar energy and off-peak grid times and discharging during peak grid times.

  • @gavbansal967
    @gavbansal967 Год назад +7

    Pure genius being able to mimic other battery types. Very clever.

  • @EdWood110
    @EdWood110 Год назад +12

    Great video, I was waiting for this for years, since you have released the first red flow battery video. Seems like a perfect battery for example at home, etc. Cannot wait to hear more about this in the coming years.

  • @DileepaRanawake
    @DileepaRanawake Год назад +5

    So glad you came back Robert - this is such an exciting technology! More of this kind of tech would be awesome 🙂

  • @Travlinmo
    @Travlinmo Год назад +3

    Thank you for continuing to cover this. I am very glad to see the work in manufacturability that has gone on. The quick look at the main board looks better than 5 years ago.

  • @moony2703
    @moony2703 Год назад +6

    Awesome to see an update!!! Really great to see how they are going, and to hear how the 4+ hour battery market is picking up and working on mass scale, as well as that they are helping solve other problems like left over salt from desalination, given how that is also a problematic pollution when too highly concentrated which people are trying to work on by splitting up plants to make them smaller and spread out, so nice to think that batteries that use salt could really help with that issue.

  • @Chris_Carini
    @Chris_Carini Год назад +7

    Chemistry has never been more interesting! Hope it works out.

  • @gordienj
    @gordienj Год назад +4

    This technology has matured beautifully. They have really covered the bases, making it compatible with other systems. I hope to see it available soon for home use.

  • @sophrapsune
    @sophrapsune Год назад +5

    I’ve had my eye on these batteries for years. They just seem to be the superior technology for a static (e.g. residential) application.
    However, when I seriously looked to buy some there were a few show-stoppers.
    They are big & heavy, requiring a forklift or other mechanical aid to place.
    They require a fair bit of space.
    They only play (or at least used to only play) with a limited range of solar inverters.
    The killer, though, is that in an urban residential application they still don’t make economic sense. Their return on investment is 10-15 years, depending on current grid tariffs.
    So I’d love to install these in my home but they still aren’t quite there.
    Perhaps as grid tariffs become more expensive and Redflow realise efficiencies of manufacture and scale, there will be a point at which they do make economic sense for the typical house on the grid.
    Having said all of that, they would be my first choice for any off-grid application.
    It’s a really promising product.

  • @longline
    @longline Год назад +1

    I'm really happy that you're covering these folks again

  • @salipander6570
    @salipander6570 Год назад +2

    There is a big limitation with this concept: the storage capacity is limited by the size of the plates instead of the amount of fluid. The zinc is collected on the plates when it is charged, whereas with other type of flow batteries no material precipitates on the plates and one could have a battery module fed with a limitless amount of fluid to have an energy storage capacity as big as needed.

  • @Felix3301
    @Felix3301 Год назад +8

    Could you please highlight some basic specs for this stuff? Round-trip efficiency? Max power output per unit etc. Those metrics are really what will make or break this tech cause it influences the financials. You can present that those types of metrics in a easy to understand way I'm sure. Just ask him stuff like; how many dryers could this thing power at the same time? It's funny and gives the audience a feeling for how much of this stuff is needed for actual usable storage

    • @adymode
      @adymode Год назад +8

      The unit stores 10 kwh, 80% round trip efficiency. 500-3000w discharge rate, 5kw peak. Electrodes want refurbished after 10 years daily cycling. Weight 240kgs, 90kg dry. Specs on redflow website.

  • @chonpincher
    @chonpincher Год назад +2

    The crucial number, not mentioned here, is the round-trip efficiency: AC joules out divided by AC joules in.

    • @ehombane
      @ehombane Год назад +1

      and the final price.
      sure, this will depend on many factors, but there should be some figures thrown around to let us make an idea.

  • @DoctorMangler
    @DoctorMangler Год назад +18

    I've seen these units. My comments relate only to the Redflow design. There are several problems with the design as it is now. First I did not see any method of automatically neutralizing spills of bromine when it's in it's charged state. It's extremely toxic just like chlorine, and due to the density and purity of the charged electrolyte it should have double spill containment and neutralizing agent packed between the double walls, something like sodium thiosulfate. The plumbing should be simplified and the overall design is more a conglomeration of off the shelf parts than a well thought out overall package. I'm not trying to totally crap on Redflow, but they've been around long enough to be using their own plastic moldings with steel cage exterior. If this unit was struck with a forklift or automobile there is a very real possibility to release large quantities of fuming bromine, in turn releasing huge quantities of bromine gas. If this happens on a windless day or enclosed space there could easily be a disaster.
    Another improvement would be adjustable tankage so that KWh could be added without having to add an entire unit unless current capacity is also needed.
    Flow batteries are really interesting and the cost per KWh promises a bright future, but there are some questions that need to be answered about safety and longevity.

    • @trevdawg94
      @trevdawg94 Год назад +4

      The way their spokesperson treated a bromine spill as nothing to be worried about doesn't give me a lot of hope that they will implement many if any safety features, it seems like they expect spills to happen but don't have a good cleanup/containment plan short of sealing off the area and letting it vaporize. If they expect their products to be a viable alternative to lithium battery storage they need to have a much more robust plan in place, as I'm willing to bet most people would rather have the risk of a battery fire than a toxic chemical spill near to where they live.

    • @DoctorMangler
      @DoctorMangler Год назад +5

      @@trevdawg94 I saw that too, but he's dead wrong about bromine. Depending on the charge state of the electrolyte it's either basically a mildly acidic solution that's pretty safe when discharged, or it's a deep red fluid that's charged and the zinc has been removed from the bromine and the bromine will fume. Bromine is one of the nastier things you can work with in a lab. It leaves nasty festering burns on skin, and it will do the same for your lungs as it boils off at room temp.

    • @AltMarc
      @AltMarc Год назад +1

      It's not a true `flow battery', as said in the video, when charged the battery contain 9Kg of zinc, which means that the capacity is limited by the size of the battery itself and external tanks won't change anything.

    • @DoctorMangler
      @DoctorMangler Год назад

      @@AltMarc Adding tanks will add kwh unless they are already working at capacity when the plates are completely zinc plated. The zinc is pulled from solution and plated onto the plates, the limiting factor is the distance between the plating and short circuit.

  • @rogerphelps9939
    @rogerphelps9939 Год назад +4

    Here in the UK, in the winter when there is no sun and no wind we need storage that can supply at least 1,000 GWh per day for possibly several weeks. The storage requirement is gigantic and currently the technology is nowhere near being able to do it.

    • @Tsnafu
      @Tsnafu Год назад

      We have baseload generating capacity going to waste at periods of low use (mostly overnight). The more nuclear (and wind power) we commission, the more spare overnight capacity we will have. Even 8 hours of reserve would save a lot of fossil fuel use

    • @gohumberto
      @gohumberto Год назад

      UK has more wind and bigger tides than anywhere in Europe.
      Harness tidal flow and you have a guaranteed regular energy source for the next billion years.
      When isn't it windy off the coast of the UK in winter? Those few days are precisely what batteries are for.
      Modern wind turbines don't actually need much wind speed.

    • @Jehty_
      @Jehty_ Год назад

      @@gohumberto And on top of that there are already some power connections between the UK and European countries.
      These can and will be extended in the future. That will also lower the need for battery storage.

  • @philipcraig956
    @philipcraig956 Год назад +4

    I’ve been following Redflow for a few years and since they are only an hour’s drive down the road, it has been east to keep up with progress. So far, it appears they are steadily moving towards being competitive but they have had a host of technical and installation problems. Being a small player up against Tesla, LG etc. they can’t incentivise installers and don’t get much of the residential market. They are getting lots of the larger storage market such as backup for cell/mobile phone towers.

  • @TassieEV
    @TassieEV Год назад +2

    This is awesome, I was just at Simon's farm in Tassie not long ago when he gave AEVA Tas a full tour and also a talk at our meeting. They are the amazing and is good for grid level storage solutions and safer than Li-ion.

  • @Andysfishing
    @Andysfishing Год назад +2

    This is great progress and a step in the correct direction.

  • @simongross3122
    @simongross3122 Год назад +9

    This makes a lot of sense. Use these batteries for grid scale and use lithium for cars.

    • @Nikoo033
      @Nikoo033 Год назад +1

      And let’s stop using lithium in countless stupid pointless objects (e.g. earphones, fitbits, Apple Watches, etc), or objects that by definition don’t need lithium batteries (e.g bicycles).

    • @em0_tion
      @em0_tion Год назад +1

      @@Nikoo033 What else can replace Li-Ions in those applications?

    • @Nikoo033
      @Nikoo033 Год назад

      @@em0_tion I was mainly implying that those things don’t really need, in truth, to be battery powered. But I think that since they don’t need much power, there is a chance that in time sodium batteries could be used for those applications in the future. 👍🏻

    • @ChrisP978
      @ChrisP978 Год назад

      ​@@Nikoo033 Weight is definitely an issue for e-bikes when they are being used as a car replacement. Would rather see a sub 1kWh bike than a 60kWh car. If they can get the technology lithium free then even better.

  • @ThomasBensler
    @ThomasBensler Год назад +12

    Whenever you talk about (rechargable) batteries, could you please mention coulomb efficiency and the estimated number of usefull cycles (until the battery is down to 80% of its capacity). That would be great! Just to be able to put it into relation to other battery technologies. Thanks a lot!

    • @dyemanoz
      @dyemanoz Год назад +5

      In the case of Redflow battery (and I assume other types of flow batteries?) the Redflow battery retains 100% of its initial capacity throughout its life.
      (Correction - after actually reading the spec sheet it states capacity loss of .5% per year (5% over 10 year warranty life).

    • @sophrapsune
      @sophrapsune Год назад +1

      One of the great features of these flow batteries is that, with maintenance, they retain virtually their entire capacity over their long lifetime. Far superior to Li-ion in that regard.

    • @Jehty_
      @Jehty_ Год назад +1

      @@sophrapsune what kind of maintenance is needed to retain their entire capacity?
      Because with "maintenance" you can also keep Li-ion battery banks at 100%.... by replacing the cells.

    • @sophrapsune
      @sophrapsune Год назад

      @@Jehty_ They have a self-maintaining discharge cycle that helps maintain electrode performance. The battery is offline for that period, so a system requires multiple battery units to stay online continuously. I believe there is also a deep maintenance cycle, which might include electrolyte top-up but I’m not sure what else. Finally, as the battery life is so long, some components such as pumps might fail and require replacement during the battery life. I’m not sure how rare failures are.

  • @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461
    @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461 Год назад +2

    THANKS ROBERT, FOR SHARING THIS WITH US 🤗💚💚💚

  • @Gent82
    @Gent82 Год назад +21

    Is it five years already since your last video on this? In the time since, I've wondered what happened to the battery tech they were testing and developing at the time. It never seemed to get mentioned again. So good to get an update and see how far they've developed it into products. Looks like it has massive potential for things bigger than vehicles.

    • @toby9999
      @toby9999 Год назад +7

      The mainstream media should cover more of this kind of stuff and less of the politics.

    • @roland9367
      @roland9367 Год назад +6

      @@toby9999 There are already enough headlines for non-technical people to read about the next big battery (or hydrogen?) breakthrough. There should be less of that, because most of it is not reaching the market or will take years.
      These redflow batteries are being made, so they are not fantasy, but they are still a huge amount time away from something useful, meaning that the price needs to come waaay down.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад

      You mean the vanadium flow battery ?..Also Australian ! I`ve no idea what happened . I thought there was some reasonably large scale test devices as its quite old tech .

  • @mikemellor759
    @mikemellor759 Год назад +2

    Competing with Helen on highly technical features - very impressive Robert 👏 Interesting feature - thanks

  • @PedroRafael
    @PedroRafael Год назад

    An excellent update! Thank you

  • @_zoesh
    @_zoesh Год назад

    Thank you for the show,

  • @dailyrider2975
    @dailyrider2975 Год назад +4

    To optimize its performance, the battery must be completely discharged periodically as a self- maintenance requirement to maximize the surface area of the battery electrode surfaces. The battery automatically engages this ‘electrode scrubbing’ operation on a periodic basis if the battery has not been recently discharged to a zero state of charge during normal operations. The overall system design needs to accommodate this typical flow battery characteristic.

  • @newsgeekus1216
    @newsgeekus1216 Год назад +20

    Great video on the science, tech, solution availability and toxicity of the battery. Lots of good information.
    But would have loved info on cost and kw density (yes dependent on tank size). Would have loved to know the cost and capacity of that battery unit in the office.

    • @dyemanoz
      @dyemanoz Год назад +1

      The Reflow battery is what is called a Hybrid Flow Battery. Unlike other types of flow battery, you can't just increase the volume of electrolyte to increase the battery capacity. There is a direct relationship between the volume of electrolyte and the capacity of the electrode plates to accept metallic zinc from the electrolyte. If you wanted to double the capacity, you would need to double the capacity of the electrode stack (or add another one - the earllier Gen 2.5 battery had two 5 kWh electrode stacks in the one battery). More importantly, it would double the size and weight of the battery, making it much more difficult to transport. I guess Redflow consider the current size as a good tradeoff between storage capacity and the logistics of transport.

    • @newsgeekus1216
      @newsgeekus1216 Год назад +1

      @@dyemanoz interesting, I missed that, but totally makes sense. Interesting trade off, increasing electrolyte storage is a great advantage of flow batteries. But having two electrons to give thus doubling capacity, is the trade off. Thanks for explaining.

    • @Berkeloid0
      @Berkeloid0 Год назад

      Cost seems to be roughly AU $13k (USD 8,500) according to various web searches for the 3 kW / 10 kWh unit. So more expensive than lithium at the moment, but it does claim to have less degradation over its lifespan so in theory it should have a usable capacity for much longer than the 10 year warranty.

  • @veronicathecow
    @veronicathecow Год назад

    Nice one Robert, thanks for the update

  • @davidhaywood8029
    @davidhaywood8029 Год назад

    A very interesting (introductory) video -- thank you!

  • @accesser
    @accesser Год назад

    Fantastic to see Australia doing this
    Well done from another Brisbane resident

  • @simonpannett8810
    @simonpannett8810 Год назад +8

    All types of Electricity storage will be needed to back up Renewable Sourced Electricity!

    • @pirojfmifhghek566
      @pirojfmifhghek566 Год назад +2

      And ideally ones that don't use materials that are difficult to source like cobalt, platinum, rhodium, etc. There was a big breakthrough in hydrogen electrolysis from seawater recently, but getting that energy back out with any useful efficiency requires fuel cells full of platinum. A ton of batteries require cobalt as a cathode, and that's all being mined with slave labor from the Congo.
      So far, this red flow battery shows incredible promise with the materials being used. Zinc, bromine, electrolyte, that's all fantastic. My biggest worry is the HDPE. The whole battery is basically a brick of plastic sheets. HDPE is normally a form of plastic that can be recycled, but I don't know if it can be recycled after doping it with carbon and soaked it in electrolytes for years. If it's not re-usable, then it's not really the kind of electricity storage that I would want to see scaled up too much. It'll be a nightmare for the landfills as these batteries get replaced by the hundreds of thousands, all around the world.
      We're already kinda seeing a taste of how bad the mess can be as we look at the decommissioning of wind turbine blades. At least there's research being done to come up with composite resins that can be broken down (and apparently turned into... gummy bears??) but for now we're being inundated with a tsunami of waste plastic from these things and not enough care is being put into their re-use.
      The only grid-scale battery concept I can think of currently that doesn't have material sustainability issues (outside of pumped hydro, which has its geographic limitations) is rechargeable molten salt batteries. The problem with those is that they're still knee-deep in R&D and research teams keep coming up with newer, better alloys to use as electrolytes. So it's hard for them to reach a stopping point where it's time to, ya know, just start making batteries. So this is not likely to become a thing for ten years or so.
      Still, boy howdy is it nice to see all the dozens of new battery ideas popping up all around the world. One of them is gonna be the winner.

    • @simonpannett8810
      @simonpannett8810 Год назад

      @@pirojfmifhghek566 good points. There is compressed CO2 that uses a plasticized "bladder" to hold the CO2 that is compressed then released. I think it is 75% efficient which is not too shaby and does not need mined resources?? All have to be better than burning Gas!!

  • @i6power30
    @i6power30 Год назад +7

    What's the key starts? Life time charge cycles? Charge and discharging rate?

  • @bellofbelmont
    @bellofbelmont Год назад

    Thanks. Well done. Great Vid. Jim Bell (Australia)

  • @cipher_ali
    @cipher_ali Год назад +15

    Been waiting for a follow up on Red Flow since I saw the first video, hope they come to the UK!

    • @grahameroberts8109
      @grahameroberts8109 Год назад

      No deliveries to UK?

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад

      @@grahameroberts8109 There was a test system provided to one of the UK Universities (Swansea?), but no commercial deliveries.

    • @Silent_Flight
      @Silent_Flight Год назад

      They are/were only looking at commercial applications due to the ongoing maintenance of the pumps etc.
      Have a look at Gelion batteries as an AGM version of this system. They have started small scale production in Aus. Finding out anymore is akin to banging your head against a brick wall.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Год назад +1

    It's all happening in Brisbane. It's a a heck of a place. Needs more train lines though and less sprawl.

  • @huwevans2653
    @huwevans2653 Год назад +1

    Fantastic Video, Amazing tech, well explained and presented........ and NO politics and un necessary bashing anyone. I hope this style of content will continue on Fully Charged. Well done.

  • @narvuntien
    @narvuntien Год назад +3

    With the guy you had on a few weeks ago, talking about how you only need 3 hours of storage to make the RE Grid work, this is great way to store hours of energy cheaply and easily.

    • @francisboyle1739
      @francisboyle1739 Год назад +1

      I seem to remember him quoting a figure of three days but with a flow battery that hardly matters - you just need a bigger tank.

    • @ferkeap
      @ferkeap Год назад

      100%re with just a bit of storage is really silly.

  • @MatthewCallison
    @MatthewCallison Год назад +2

    I've watched the first Fully Charged show on Redflow a dozen times. I got panels and batteries in my house 2 years ago and wish I could have had these batteries instead of LiOn. I shared the video with the installer company and they loved it. If they ever start selling residential units in the US I will be very interested.

    • @ianhailey
      @ianhailey Год назад

      Same, why is it taking so long!

  • @QALibrary
    @QALibrary Год назад

    What a great update video

  • @Cintmaasmusic
    @Cintmaasmusic Год назад

    Fantastic! Keep it up, Australia!

  • @DominikJaniec
    @DominikJaniec Год назад

    mimicking different battery kinds is an interesting idea, very neat with also safety during fire

  • @DonnyDonnMendoza
    @DonnyDonnMendoza Год назад +4

    Now that might be “old” technology but it’s still dope af! Will this be on show at fully charged?!? Fully charged is going to be awesome!!!

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Год назад +2

    This will confuse your UK audience. A South African in Brisbane.
    Love your work 👍

  • @SrSKaTiZSrS
    @SrSKaTiZSrS Год назад

    Fantastic. I hope the materials are sourced ethically.

  • @georgegates526
    @georgegates526 Год назад

    Looks like the first "clean - non poisonus" battery technology I have found. And I found a LOT of "new technology" batteries. Well done! Crank them out!!

    • @anonymous.youtuber
      @anonymous.youtuber 10 месяцев назад

      Well Bromine is a rather nasty chemical. I wonder if the other chemicals in the soup make it more palatable. The exposure to Bromine immediately dangerous to life and health is 3 ppm. That’s why it’s transported in steel vessels lined with lead. The Bromide ion is less harmful, ingestion of 0,5 to 1 gram daily would cause bromism.
      Of course , one could argue batteries are not ment to be for eaten, but wouldn’t it be wonderful if someone came up with a battery that used chemicals that are even less toxic ?

  • @mickwilson127
    @mickwilson127 Год назад

    Really interesting video Bobby

  • @ElectricCarAustralia
    @ElectricCarAustralia Год назад

    Great to see a video of a product made in my back yard. 👍🔋⚡

  • @anyalpine
    @anyalpine Год назад +1

    15°C (59°F) is a huge limitation unless I heard wrong and it’s -15°C (5°F). In constantly warm climates this obviously isn’t a problem, however much of the world gets much colder than that and it would waste quite a bit of energy to heat them that much.

  • @narobii9815
    @narobii9815 Год назад

    Glad he covered the main material supply question on do we have enough zinc and bromine

  • @CTCTraining1
    @CTCTraining1 Год назад +7

    Robert, good interview but you really should have challenged him on building more manufacturing plants around the world to cope with supply. Partnering up to deliver for the world is what we need. 😀👍

    • @simonhenry7867
      @simonhenry7867 Год назад +3

      By the time these reach the UK they are more expensive than Li-ion.

    • @lagunafishing
      @lagunafishing Год назад

      Partnering up is what gives rise to Globalism. Keep it in house.

    • @NDFilmNZ
      @NDFilmNZ Год назад +3

      @@lagunafishingnothing wrong with working together to meet a common goal

    • @mateobravo9212
      @mateobravo9212 Год назад

      I think it goes without saying this will be a global effort, hopefully distinctly non-Chinese. Just wait for Redflow to establish where it's long term markets are...

  • @camillotee7068
    @camillotee7068 Год назад +3

    Very interesting! Thank you!
    I was wondering how longterm stable the "hybernation mode" is, really? How much more stable is Zinc Bromine in comparison to all the Vanadium based RedoxFlow batteries? I know they had their discharge issues a couple years back.

  • @seazenbones6945
    @seazenbones6945 Год назад

    Good news. Thanks.

  • @matthewknobel6954
    @matthewknobel6954 Год назад +2

    What if in new construction, that you put in a 1mWh flow battery or maybe even a 500kWh that feeds the house directly and let utilities then balance the load. If small scale does not work, about a distribution set up for new communities where 10-20 houses share a battery and the benefits. If each house has solar that can feed back into the battery many people could benefit.

    • @roland9367
      @roland9367 Год назад

      Regardless of the battery type you use, this is not very efficient use of batteries and material.
      Any battery system from 5 to 15kWh has the most impact in a house, it increases self consumption up to 70%
      Past that point, you might be able to go complete selfsufficient with 1MWh, but you will just be draining it once a year. So an astoundingly low battery cycle rate of once per year, which a lot of battery tech can do.
      This will never be economical, regardless of which battery tech is used.
      And by the way, in most houses a 500kWh battery would just delay the month a bit, in which the house is no longer able to support its own energy. This is talking from a perspective of a house in UK / Netherlands / Germany for example.
      In sunnier places (like Australia) you probably don't need a 500kWh at all.

    • @Jehty_
      @Jehty_ Год назад

      @@roland9367 you said "increases self consumption up to 70%"
      Up from where? What would be the self consumption % without a battery?

    • @roland9367
      @roland9367 Год назад

      @@Jehty_ People with solar and no batteries typically only consume a third of the solar energy when it is generated. So self consumption of around 30% but it could be as low as 20% if you have a lot of solar and you are also not home a lot.
      So a small battery already makes a big change in that.

  • @nerdy_dav
    @nerdy_dav Год назад

    How incredibly clever!

  • @blackcoffeeandbooks8884
    @blackcoffeeandbooks8884 Год назад +1

    Great to see progress here as well! Interesting how every part of our technology from computing, to energy production to AI are undergoing incredible revolutions at the moment. Exiting times are ahead of us!

    • @rexxbailey2764
      @rexxbailey2764 Год назад

      AND FUNNY HOW IT ALL STARTED NOW BASICALLY CAUSE OF ONE MAN. WHO INSISTED ON MAKING A PROFIT FROM IT!

  • @OneEyedMonkey9000
    @OneEyedMonkey9000 Год назад +1

    Very cool.

  • @shaunhall960
    @shaunhall960 Год назад

    Amazing!

  • @adamwood7743
    @adamwood7743 Год назад

    Fantastic! May they pump as many out as fast as possible

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад

      😃I see what you did there!

  • @cujoyyc4453
    @cujoyyc4453 Год назад +4

    So what I hear you saying is, without additional heating in a building, this might not be a long term storage solution for Canadian winters.
    Otherwise, interesting tech.

    • @Muppetkeeper
      @Muppetkeeper Год назад

      There is often plenty of low grade waste heat in industrial areas, the trick is to use that. However would hydro storage be better in Canada?

    • @ehombane
      @ehombane Год назад +1

      It sure can be, if you store it underground. Sure, some added price, but still is better to capture summers sun, or winters wind, then burning coal and oil.

    • @cujoyyc4453
      @cujoyyc4453 Год назад

      @@Muppetkeeper Not here on the prairies.

  • @drewcipher896
    @drewcipher896 Год назад

    Its been a few years since Ive heard about redflow, glad they're still kickin. Wish flow batteries would start taking off faster.
    Oh wait he just said the thing about them struggling at

  • @valdisvi
    @valdisvi Год назад +1

    Best way to store energy is Uranium pellet or Thorium salt. With few hundred of kilograms of such "battery" you can provide GW of power and TWh of energy for 1,5 years.

  • @pirojfmifhghek566
    @pirojfmifhghek566 Год назад +3

    Another long term grid energy storage solution, alongside a hundred others. Not being sarcastic, I'm psyched that I keep seeing new ones popping up left and right. I'm always happy to see another potential energy storage company join the fray.
    Hmm, carbon-doped HDPE. That's gotta be an interesting substance to work with. I wonder about how one would recycle that, though. Can it even be broken down and recycled like regular HDPE? If it can't be, then I would hope that the battery at least lasts a helluva long time.
    3:44 Electrolyte? You can't fool me. That's Irn Bru, lads.

  • @simonlinser8286
    @simonlinser8286 Год назад +1

    I wish i worked making batteries so cool

  • @JRJetMan
    @JRJetMan Год назад +1

    Sounds to be a very worthwhile battery development to fulfill static energy storage. Bottom line is cost and ability to produce them.

  • @johnklein338
    @johnklein338 Год назад +1

    Was excited until I heard that it needs to stay above +15 degrees. That's only 3 months of the year reliably in Saskatchewan and most of Canada.

  • @seethruhead7119
    @seethruhead7119 Год назад +1

    Why not use pumped storage hydropower if you need super long lasting energy storage.

  • @amiralozse1781
    @amiralozse1781 Год назад

    am soooo happy you didnt ask any critical questions !

  • @zodiacfml
    @zodiacfml Год назад +2

    they got to be quick. as lithium prices are going down, despite increasing demand, i'm sensing that sodium ion batteries are going to take over energy storage in a few years.

  • @Hybridog
    @Hybridog Год назад +1

    As many commenters have wondered: why no residential use information? Are they too expensive? Is there some safety issue to overcome before putting them in the hands of frequentyly stupid retail customers? Do they not have the right charge/capacity specs for practical home use? What is the reason, because this seems like a potential winner in the growing home battery markets around the world.

  • @lyledal
    @lyledal Год назад +2

    It's fantastic how much truly amazing electric tech is coming out of Australia!

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад

      The Aussies are really trying hard.

  • @AdamIverson
    @AdamIverson Год назад +1

    I'm going to sound negative, but this tech is literally 144 years old. Why wasn't it commercialized back then and still not widespread mainstream today? Stuff like this, in theory, would be great for grid and home energy storage, but we can't even buy one for our home and only available for invest. What's holding it back anyway?

  • @otternase3562
    @otternase3562 Год назад +2

    I'm just curious how they make sure that no elemental bromine ever forms within the battery or in case of an accident or fire. Elemental bromine is HIGHLY toxic for humans and pretty much every form of life. He was talking about bromine a lot but I'm almost certain he meant bromine compounds.

  • @simonlinser8286
    @simonlinser8286 Год назад +3

    You can make these batteries yourself too for off grid, you just would have to keep it in its own outbuilding with ventilation and hopefully filtration because if over charged it will off gas very small amounts of bromine gas.

    • @MrAdopado
      @MrAdopado Год назад

      mmm ... nice ...

    • @ChrisP978
      @ChrisP978 Год назад

      Elemental bromine is quite toxic, will cause chemical burns and severe lung irritation at as little as 3ppm. If there was a chance of venting it would be essential that it vents outdoors where it could quickly dissipate.

  • @rabidbigdog
    @rabidbigdog Год назад +1

    Australia's Redflow is brilliant.

  • @cesartrujillo4190
    @cesartrujillo4190 Год назад +1

    Let’s hope they are limitlessly busy. Sounds like a lot of great tech there

  • @stefanweilhartner4415
    @stefanweilhartner4415 Год назад

    i think that in a standard container format you can also deliver energy to a remote location and then build up a roof of solar cells and you have a sustainable kind of power plant set up in a few hours.
    i don't know the cost structure of that but the interesting aspect is scaling up energy while maximum power does not need to go up. if you can supply 20kW max., you could scale the energy from about 20kWh to 500kWh without adding any plates, just the tank with the liquid stuff.
    that makes it interesting for long term storage far beyond 20h of a typical home storage battery.
    i guess this is the area where that concept can shine also when it comes to costs.

  • @julianowens4071
    @julianowens4071 Год назад +1

    Exiting development especially if lithium isn’t being used in these batteries and also non flammable,sounds perfect

  • @fishyerik
    @fishyerik Год назад +1

    Nice. Bromine is cheap, it's not as easy or cheap to extract from "normal" seawater as from dead sea, or some other places, but it can be done. Not needing the same "special" elements as lithium ion batteries, is an advantage, for both technologies.
    The low temperature issue shouldn't have to matter much in large systems, with 15 kg of electrolyte per kWh of capacity means big systems with many units will have huge combined heat capacity. A maximum DC-DC efficiency maximum of 80% means 20% or more of the energy turns into heat in the batteries. That heat can be enough, combined with some insulation in colder climates to keep the systems warm enough. Obviously assuming some daily charge/discharge, but that's what grid storage batteries are really good for. Technically possible to use them for seasonal storage sure, a lot battery technologies can be used for that, but it becomes absurdly expensive per unit of energy out from the system. That's why the guy from redflow talked about 4-8 hours primarily.
    A battery being limited to an absolute max of 0.5 C peak, delivering at a rate equivalent to half it's capacity per hour, is never an actual advantage, neither having a rather small window of power output where it has it's highest efficiency, those are quite severe drawbacks, but undeniably acceptable drawbacks if the cost per unit of energy storage capacity is much lower.
    There are also disadvantages to having to pump a liquid, compared to "conventional" batteries, this system needs to become significantly cheaper per unit of capacity compared to lithium batteries to stay relevant. I don't se any ovbious reason to why that should be impossible to achieve.
    Also, I see some commenters assuming that you just have to use bigger electrolyte tanks, or add more tanks to increase capacity indefinitely, it doesn't work that way, the plates have limited capacity. It would definitely be possible to make systems a little bit cheaper per kWh capacity by increasing just electrolyte tanks and plates, but their system is already a 240 kg system with a maximum of 3 kW continuous output. It's easier to reach efficient production of one system design, than with a lot of designs.
    There are flow batteries where you can increase the amount of electrolyte to increase the capacity, theoretically indefinitely, but I'm sure redflow have chosen this particular "hybrid technology" for very good reasons.

    • @allanhugh2044
      @allanhugh2044 Год назад +2

      Erik, you are the only person to comment and answer the question about heat output derived from the manufacture of plating and de-plating the stack of plates. You are correct, I have two of these batteries at 38º latitude and close to sea level, so a temperate climate. Our ambient temperature range is around zero degrees Celsius to 50 degrees Celsius. The way the interview went there is a misconception on the ability of these flow batteries ability to work in sub optimal temperatures.
      Our batteries are outside in the weather, in the summertime they have the afternoon sun on them and over the last 3½ years they have endured and continued working in ambient temperatures of 47.8ºC in full sun. At the same time they have worked perfectly well down to approximately 0.5ºC in our winter. The batteries have a cooling fan, which is a variable speed unit that ratchets up and down as and when required, the fan in general keeps the battery operating somewhere around optimal temperature.
      In the hotter times, the batteries slowly heat up on a hot day (over 45ºC) the cooling fans do keep the temperatures below the ambient, but not by too much. In the colder times, when the ambient temperature drops, the batteries are generally running around 20ºC or thereabouts when the ambient is somewhere between 1ºC to 15ºC. Last night our ambient was down to 11ºC and the battery temperature of the one I checked was 25.1ºC. I understand that the energy loss in the form of heat, (which is one way to put it) is around 1000W at it's peak. The only time I have seen a battery struggle in cold weather was when the battery was shut down for some maintenance and it was restarted with an ambient of around 5ºC. It took quite a while (few hours I seem to remember) before it was running at normal operating temperature.
      The maintenance cycles are scheduled (in the BMS software options) at every 24h, 48h or 72h. During a maintenance cycle the battery discharges itself to zero charge capacity. It can do this by various means, we have two batteries, our discharge/maintenance cycles are designed to coincide with sunrise. In other words, the maintenance cycle is designed to be finished shortly after sunrise, meaning the fresh battery is ready to take any excess to the house requirements rooftop solar. The maintenance cycle is the key to the longevity of these batteries, at the end of a maintenance cycle, one is starting with (virtually) a brand new battery. In our situation, our current maintenance cycle is every 48 hours, meaning that this morning one battery is virtually brand new, the other battery is 1½ days old and will be rejuvenated shortly after sunrise tomorrow.
      During the discharge cycle, if the house is using power, that battery supplies the house. If the house requirements are quite low, then the excess power is delivered to the other battery, or batteries if there are more than two. Essentially once energy is stored in the system, it is kept in storage until you desire to use it. If you are really using low power, then the maintenance cycle takes longer, or you can discharge to the grid if that option is there for you.
      In short they are a brilliant battery, no worries at all about fire issues and their operating range is effectively from 1% SOC through to 100% SOC. They can give around 5000W and my experience is that they will do this for somewhere around 5 minutes then as things progress the output gradually lowers. Having two batteries is the minimum if you wish to have 24/7 battery power. We have two Victron inverters capable of 5000W output each for a possible 10,000W output. During testing after initial installation, we had around 5% SOC and we pulled around 8,500W by turning anything and everything in the house on at once. In practice, the house rarely requires much more that 5000W which is usually the oven, a microwave and a couple of heat pumps either heating or cooling the house. In general the house has a constant consumption somewhere between 150W to 500W.
      Our house battery system has been designed to service the entire house, in other words the batteries supply everything when the sun isn't shining. When the sun is shining the rooftop powers the house, excess goes to the batteries, excess from the battery requirements is exported to the grid. If the grid goes down, and it has a few times, we can continue as if nothing has happened, which is good and bad. Good because nothing shuts down or stops working, bad because we don't know that the grid has shut down.
      I use an electric arc welder in the garage, 3 phase woodturning lathe and anything else I wish to use, while at the same time the house is still running perfectly fine. In the summertime, we are effectively 100% self sufficient from mid October to the end of March as the shorter days and lower angle of the sun happens. On top of that we changed our HWS from gas storage to heat pump storage (Sanden) all this from 7.7kW photo voltaic on our roof tops.

    • @fishyerik
      @fishyerik Год назад

      @@allanhugh2044 You seem to really like those batteries! A few reflections, I don't know for sure, but I suspect the temperature limits are at least in part to minimize degradation, especially the upper limit. A plain fan can not decrease the temperature below true ambient, fans can cool us down even if ambient temperature is higher because we have built in evaporative cooling, aka sweat.
      Anyhow, the huge mass is enough to reduce temperature extremes of the battery itself significantly, it takes a lot of energy to heat up so much mass from "normal" nighttime temperatures to too high for those batteries.

  • @dustintravis8791
    @dustintravis8791 Год назад

    This battery would be perfect here in Florida, I would love to use a safe battery at my house that can last decades.

  • @drumbrakes
    @drumbrakes Год назад

    3:43 You call it Zinc Bromine Electrolyte with "a few other things" but we can tell it's really Irn Bru.

  • @CARambolagen
    @CARambolagen Год назад

    I find it amazing that you are not telling us the name of the person who is being interviewed! Slack journalism!

  • @fishndive1961
    @fishndive1961 Год назад

    I hope you are enjoying your trip to Australia Robert. You really are missing out if you don't come across to Perth and experience our superior weather. 😉

  • @lavectech
    @lavectech Год назад +1

    Great video. Would be good for grid scale and home backup power.

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад +1

      They haven't quite got the reliability for home backup power (but they will get there), but for gridscale where a few bad batteries in 10,000 they are already a great option.

  • @lagunafishing
    @lagunafishing Год назад

    Good on the Ausis for doing this. Cost and kw density?

  • @CARambolagen
    @CARambolagen Год назад

    Wow!

  • @nukenet1
    @nukenet1 Год назад +6

    Robert, seeing as Redflow actually talk to you, can you ask them why they never respond to residential requests for their batteries?

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад +1

      It is disappointing. You would think that at the very least they would issue a statement saying that they are not going to do anything for the residential market for five years or whatever. They seem scared about coming off the fence.

    • @Hybridog
      @Hybridog Год назад

      @@tlangdon12 It's either they just are not ready to enter that market, or there is some technical/safety/cost reason they don't want it in the (often stupid) hands of consumers.

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад +1

      @@Hybridog I think it’s a sensible decision on their part not to enter the residential market just yet. Consumers aren’t as knowledgable and are not always as reasonable as commercial customers. Although there are plenty of exceptions in both areas.

    • @TomTom-cm2oq
      @TomTom-cm2oq Год назад

      I would also immediately buy this for my house.

    • @dyemanoz
      @dyemanoz Год назад

      Reflow just make batteries. A residential installation also requires a batttery inverter, presumably solar panels and solar inverter if not already there etc etc. They do list integrators on their website.
      A few years ago (around 2015) Redflow did try to enter the domestic market. Their battery was by far the cheapest (per kWh of capacity) on the market, and came with a pretty good-looking enclosure. It even had a catchy name - the ZCell. Shortly afterwards Tesla announced their first-gen Powerwall which was price-competitive with the ZCell, and of course had incomparable brand recognition. The rest, as they say, is history.

  • @allan1brown
    @allan1brown Год назад

    I like the use of irn bru

  • @ciaranflynn6291
    @ciaranflynn6291 Год назад

    Would have liked to know the kw capacity of that 100L example at the end. Was it mentioned?

  • @DanBurgaud
    @DanBurgaud Год назад +2

    9:00 I checked the specsheet: this battery pack is ~240KG, 10KWH.
    Equivalent LiFePo4 for home energy storage of the same weight packs ~ 20-30KWH
    OK maybe the costing then.

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад +1

      Redflow batteries are not a battery you would use in a mobile application, nor in a restricted space where materials handling equipment can't be used. Basically, if you haven't got a Telehandler that can pickup a shipping container, you are not a customer for Redflow.

    • @luc_libv_verhaegen
      @luc_libv_verhaegen Год назад

      Someone dug up that the previous gen was like 1300usd per kWh. That's like 10x of LiFePO4.

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад

      @@luc_libv_verhaegen That’s because China doesn’t mass-produce Zinc-flow batteries.

    • @luc_libv_verhaegen
      @luc_libv_verhaegen Год назад

      @@tlangdon12 And this changes the fact that they are 10x off of being competitive, how exactly?
      The fact that it is bromide and zinc based is all good and well, but aren't those supposed to be cheaper than lithium? Then how come it is 10x as expensive?
      This is not a flow battery which is supposed to have quasi unlimited storage capacity.
      This is a plating battery with part of the electrolyte externalised. Once the surface is saturated with zinc, all the capacity is used up. The near-zero self discharge is also not a big step up from LiFePO4 cells.
      As much as i would like it to be different, I have no hope for this company.

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Год назад

      @@luc_libv_verhaegen you are entitled to your opinion, but you are not comparing like with like. Lithium batteries are in mass production. These batteries are not.

  • @wlhgmk
    @wlhgmk Год назад +1

    I would love to get two 10kWh redflow batteries for my house but they aren't available in New Zealand, here right beside Australia and I can't get an answer on how much they will cost if they are ever available. I also can't get hard information on the Gelion batteries that also use ZnBr technology but have a very similar architecture to lead acid batteries. Are these batteries less expensive per kWh stored than Li batteries. Size is of no concern for static applications. It is all about cost and longevity.

  • @nomoreheroes93
    @nomoreheroes93 Год назад

    Still no one better at this than Bobby by a long way - get him on the main channel more please

  • @grast5150
    @grast5150 Год назад

    I really like that all component are common and NOT a rare earth material. This makes temperature and size the only major concerns. I am assuming the cost of these batteries will be economical or better. A 10K Amp hour battery at 24 volts is pretty impressive. They did not state the charge and discharge rates though.