Aluminium-air battery can power electric vehicles for 1,000 miles, will come to production cars in 2017

Phinergy's aluminium-air batteries

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Phinergy, an Israeli startup, has demonstrated an aluminium-air battery that is capable of powering an electric vehicle for up to 1,000 miles (1,609km). Unlike other metal-air batteries that we’ve written about in the past, such as IBM’s lithium-air battery, Phinergy’s Al-air battery actually consumes aluminium as a fuel, allowing for an energy density that far surpasses conventional battery technologies and even begins to rival gas and diesel. Phinergy says it has signed a contract with a global automaker for “production volumes” of the battery, starting in 2017.

Metal-air batteries aren’t a new idea. Zinc-air is a very well understood battery chemistry that is used in hearing aids, and potentially in other biological implants. IBM is busy working on a lithium-air battery that, like Phinergy’s battery, is also targeted at long-range electric vehicles. In recent months, it has emerged that sodium-air might also be a viable battery chemistry. In all three cases, it is the air component that makes these batteries so desirable. In a conventional battery, the chemical reaction is entirely internal, which is why batteries tend to be very dense and heavy. In a metal-air battery, energy is produced by the oxidization of a metal — lithium, zinc, aluminium — with the oxygen coming from the air around us, rather than being stored in the battery, resulting in a much lighter battery.

A diagram of the aluminium-air battery chemistry

Phinergy’s Al-air battery is novel for two reasons: First, the company seems to have found a way of preventing carbon dioxide causing corrosion damage to the aluminium. Second, the battery actually consumes the aluminium as a fuel, slowly turning the aluminium into aluminium oxide. Phinergy’s prototype Al-air battery has 50 aluminium plates, with each plate providing enough fuel for 20 miles. After 1,000 miles, the plates must be mechanically recharged — a euphemistic way of saying that the plates must be physically switched out. The Al-air battery must also be refilled with water every 200 miles, to replenish the electrolyte.

Depending on your point of view, mechanical recharging is both awesome and awful. On the one hand, you can give your car another 1,000 miles of range just by slotting in a new battery; on the other hand, buying a new battery every 1,000 miles sounds like very poor overall economy. Ultimately, it will probably come down to the price of the battery. At today’s market rate, a kilo of aluminium costs $2, and one pack of 50 plates weighs 25kg — so, ignoring labor costs, it would cost $50 to refill your Al-air battery. $50 to travel 1,000 miles is really rather good — at $4 per gallon of gas, that’s an equivalent of around 90 mpg. The aluminium oxide can be recycled back into aluminium, too, though it isn’t a particularly cheap or easy process.

Phinergy's Citroen C1 electric carFor now, though, it seems like Phinergy is using its Al-air battery as a range extender, with a standard lithium battery as the primary energy source. In the video below, a Citroen C1 has been outfitted with a small lithium-ion battery that can power the car for a few dozen miles — and then an Al-air battery in the trunk that acts a range extender, feeding power to the Li-ion battery. Phinergy tells Green Car Reports that it has signed a contract with a global automaker to bring its Al-air battery to production cars in 2017, though it isn’t clear if the batteries will be used as a range extender, or as the primary power source. Presumably, though, the automaker will bundle the car with a monthly supply of aluminium plates, shipped to your doorstep.

Now read: ExtremeTech’s best cars of 2012

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  • Snipes

    It strikes me that something that consumes fuel to produce electricity is a fuel cell not a battery.

    Then again, I guess that since aluminum is produced by cooking aluminum oxide with crap tons of electricity. You are basicly just pulling that electricity back out and allowing the material to return to its natural state. I wonder what the efficiency of that process (how much electricity goes into the furnace vs how much comes out of the “battery”) is?

    • https://www.mrseb.co.uk/ Sebastian Anthony

      Aye, indeed. Phinergy seems to be aware that their batteries are only as efficient as the original aluminium-producing process.

  • Netmaker

    Using the cost of bulk aluminum and throwing out a 90mpg efficiency figure is extremely misleading when the labor, machining and transportation costs could easily double the cost of the battery.

    • bkrharold

      If enough people adopt the new battery, there would be economies of scale bringing the price down. The energy to recycle the aluminum from used batteries could come from solar and or wind power

  • https://twitter.com/kmhg Reboot

    yeah, but after thos 1600 kms, yo must waste the battery. It can’t be recharged at home. It must be disposed to be recicled.

  • some_guy_said

    The headline is a bit sensationalist. I would agree that this is an interesting concept.

    This battery is no different from other metal air batteries, except that the process is not symmetrically reversible. I don’t think that’s explained very well. However, I bet they might be able to come up with a chemical to “Recharge” the battery (Using chemistry), instead of completely reprocessing it.

    • bkrharold

      It is possible that a microorganism could be used to replenish the aluminum. They are already developing microorganisms that can process waste material contaminated with heavy metals, and even radioactive waste.

  • https://www.facebook.com/damon.bailey.14 Damon Bailey

    so how long until someone makes an add on (Mr. Fusion style?) that one can throw their pop/beer cans into in hopes of making a few more miles?

    *disclaimer* I was trying to be funny, i realize the low grade aluminum in pop cans is NOT likely to be used without refining/etc. But can you picture someone in a new luxury super car running down ditches on a back stretch of highway praying to find enough cans to get to the next town?

  • https://www.facebook.com/robmello Rob Mello

    Now if they could have the aluminum in the batteries turn into sapphire, then they’d really be on to something…

  • Debaditya Chatterjee

    why only cars? why not consumer electronics?

    • cdf9dsyhf

      You want to start loading your laptop with aluminum?

  • https://peakvt.blogspot.com PeakVT

    This technology would seem to suffer from the problem of distribution. If there was a large network of stores spaced no more than 10 or 20 miles apart which could be relied upon to have fresh batteries in stock, it might work. But who will invest in that infrastructure without a large base of customers? Hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles suffer from the same problem. Regular BEVs don’t as much, because they can be charged at home, and auto manufacturers have settled on one type of charger interface for quick-charge stations.

  • daydaygone

    How do they deal with the corrosion problem of Al without super high purity (99.999%)in Alkaline solution?

    To Snipes: Mobile electricity is quite different with general electricity. Although lots of general electricity is consumed, Al is cheap, which might make this Al/air primary battery applicable.

  • Asterix

    Note that the reaction that generates electricity from these things isn’t reversible in-situ. Once the aluminum’s been used, it’s a waste product. This is roughly analogous to running your car on carbon-zinc cells.

    Lithium-ion batteries, on the other hand are rechargeable in situ, which is what makes them valuable for use in vehicles. If the motors that power the wheels going uphill can be run as generators going downhill, you can regain some of the energy for re-use. Not so for these aluminum batteries.

  • https://www.facebook.com/sam.mills.3745 Sam Mills

    If you add labor to install and it equals total cost $100 for battery replacement then that equals 40 mpg @ $4 / gallon. a lot of cars get that now.

    • https://www.facebook.com/chaim.spielman Chaim Spielman

      Where did you come up with a $100 price tag? If anything, it would be similar to tire rotation, or fixing a flat. I say the price will be $15-20 to swap.