iron phosphate

Latest

  • General Motors announces Wednesday, August 16, 2023 it is investing in AI and battery materials Innovator Mitra Chem. GM and Mitra Chem will develop iron-based cathode active materials, like lithium manganese iron phosphate, to power affordable and accessible EV batteries compatible with GM’s EV propulsion architecture, the Ultium Platform. GM’s funding will enable Mitra Chem to scale its current operations and expedite bringing their battery materials to market. (Photo by Karl Nielsen for General Motors)

    GM’s latest investment could speed development of cheaper EV batteries

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    08.16.2023

    GM has boosted its investment with Mitra Chem, a company focused on building batteries in the US using iron-based cathodes, with a new $60 million financing round.

  • MIT builds battery from bacterial virus, humans to power machines by 2012

    by 
    Thomas Ricker
    Thomas Ricker
    04.03.2009

    We've been tracking MIT professor Angela Belcher's attempt to build batteries and nano-electronics from viruses since 2006. Scientifically speaking, the so-called "virus" is actually a bacteriophage, a virus that preys only on bacteria while leaving humans of diminishing scientific knowledge alone to doubt that claim. Now, in a new report co-authored by Belcher, MIT research documents the construction of a lithium-ion battery (pictured after the break) with the help of a biological virus dubbed M13. M13 acts as a "biological scaffold" that allows carbon nanotubes and bits of iron phosphate to attach and form a network for conducting electricity. Specifically, MIT used the genetically engineered material to create the battery's negatively charged anode and positively charged cathode. Best of all, MIT's technique can be performed at, or below room temperature which is important from a manufacturing perspective -- a process that MIT claims will be "cheap and environmentally benign." Already MIT has constructed a virus-battery about the size of that found in a watch to turn on small lights in an MIT lab. Belcher claims that just a third of an ounce (about 10 grams) of the viral battery material could power an iPod for 40 hours. In time and with enough effort MIT expects to scale the technology to power electronic vehicles. Remember, when the time comes choose the red pill.[Via Scientific American, Thanks James]