Space Industry and Business News  
ENERGY TECH
World's Most Powerful Industrial Lithium-Ion Battery

Corvus invested more than $5 million to create a safe, modular battery pack tough enough to withstand the world's harshest ocean and port environments, as well as fully function between -4 degrees and 140 degrees Fahrenheit. In addition, each pack has an average life of twenty years. Lead-acid batteries last just seven years.
by Staff Writers
Richmond, Canada (SPX) Nov 03, 2010
Corvus Energy is transforming the marine, transportation and energy industries with its release of an advanced lithium-ion battery technology that is able to store and distribute energy in megawatt sizes and has the capacity to output sustained power comparable to diesel engines in hybrid and full-electric vessels and vehicles.

Current hybrid designs in the marine industry, being installed with Corvus batteries, will cut CO2 emissions and fuel consumption in heavy-polluting workboats by 75 percent.

Corvus' proprietary lithium-ion battery packs have four times the power and energy storage of lead-acid batteries in half the volume and a quarter of the weight. Each battery pack delivers at least 22 percent more power and energy density than the most powerful Lithium-ion phosphate batteries used in electric vehicles and consumer products.

The battery design is built around a new nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC)-based Dow Kokam cell and patent-pending Corvus battery management system that exponentially enhances battery efficiency and performance with energy storage capacity from 6.2kWh to unlimited sizes.

"We've made the theoretical possible," said Brent Perry, Corvus' chief executive officer.

"This is the first time that truly effective portable and remote energy storage has been created for the marine, transportation and heavy-power industries. Our battery's cells are 99 percent efficient, a full 10 to 30 percent better than any other brand. It's available today and it's revolutionizing the energy sector."

Company founders George Roddan, a ground-breaking naval architect, and Neil Simmonds, who holds more than 70 patents in battery management systems, joined forces with Perry in 2009 to create a battery pack that could provide diesel-engine-scale power and solve the marine and transportation industries' energy problems.

Corvus invested more than $5 million to create a safe, modular battery pack tough enough to withstand the world's harshest ocean and port environments, as well as fully function between -4 degrees and 140 degrees Fahrenheit. In addition, each pack has an average life of twenty years. Lead-acid batteries last just seven years.

"Corvus is enabling engineers, who design wind farms and grid systems to cruise ships and tug boats, to rethink how they can store energy and use power," said Perry. "It changes the entire landscape. Energy can be stored in regions that previously didn't have consistent power and ports can clean up their act with workboats and equipment that no longer require diesel engines."

Marine Applications
Tugboats idle up to 90 percent of the time and operate at full power the remaining 10 percent. With Corvus, a 3,000-horsepower harbor tug in hybrid form will save 122,000 gallons of fuel and will reduce its emissions by 900 tons of carbon, 21 tons of nitrogen oxide and 8.62 tons of particulate matter each year.

Tugboats can draw extra energy from the battery packs during full-power surges, fully rely on the pack during idle periods and power critical navigational instruments for hours. The packs are the most efficient in the industry and recharge in 30 minutes.

Transportation Applications
Corvus' affect on the trucking industry is just as far reaching. Long-haul trucks idle an average of 2,000 hours per year, consuming one gallon of fuel per hour.

Auxiliary power units with Corvus batteries allow trucks to reduce fuel consumption by 2,000 gallons annually and eliminate on a per vehicle basis: 19 metric tons of carbon dioxide, 705 pounds of nitrogen oxide, 143 pounds of reactive organic gas and 9.5 pounds of particulate matter.

Manufacturing Applications
Russ Kremer of Heritage Acre Foods recently selected Corvus Energy batteries as his primary energy storage provider for his 100 percent eco-powered, zero-waste pork-processing plant near Springville, MO.

The plant will process Heritage Acre Foods' all-natural pork, capture and reprocess the blood and other waste, rather than dumping it, and will have a bio-diesel plant to make its own diesel fuel to run its generators. Kremer selected Corvus Energy's revolutionary 400-500 kWh battery pack to store energy captured by wind and solar generators and disperse it as needed.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Corvus Energy
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ENERGY TECH
SMSS Autonomous Vehicle To Demo Portable Battery Charging For Soldiers
Dallas TX (SPX) Oct 26, 2010
Lockheed Martin's Squad Mission Support System (SMSS) autonomous vehicle will demonstrate its rugged maneuverability while meeting Soldiers' needs to recharge batteries in Portable Power Excursion (PPE) tests next month at Fort Riley, KS. The Portable Power Excursion test is part of the larger Nett Warrior program, which will use the PPE tests to collect data and form a strategy to help al ... read more







ENERGY TECH
Yahoo! and Samsung expand Internet TV territory

Facebook steps into middle of smartphone lifestyles

Oracle buying Art Technology for one billion dollars

Major Surgery Complete For Deep Space Network Antenna

ENERGY TECH
Raytheon To Provide Improved Track Correlation And Fusion Capability

Lockheed Martin Adds Radio Frequency Management To Tactical Network Planning Capability

Testing For AEHF Satellite Services Completed

Sagem Prime Contractor For RIF-NG New-Gen Soldier Info Network

ENERGY TECH
Ariane 5 Lofts Dual Birds

Payload Preparations Underway For Fifth Ariane 5 2010 Mission

Sea Launch Company Emerges From Chapter 11

Ariane 5 Rolls Out For Dual Bird Launch

ENERGY TECH
Savi Challenges You To Imagine The Best Wireless Applications

European Satellite Navigation Competition Awards

Raytheon Completes Software Specification Review for GPS OCX

China Launches Sixth Satellite For Own GPS Network

ENERGY TECH
Argentina, Brazil to build cargo plane

BOC Aviation orders 30 Airbus A320

Boeing expects China fleet to triple in 20 years

Swiss solar plane confirmed as multiple record-breaker

ENERGY TECH
Intel opens biggest ever chip plant in Vietnam

Intel to open billion-dollar chip plant in Vietnam

Intel to invest up to 8 billion dollars in US chip plants

Intel posts three billion dollar quarterly net profit

ENERGY TECH
Envisat In Its New Home

FTC ends inquiry into Google 'Street View' data collection

Modeling The Fiery Past And Future Of Planet Earth

Hanging On For Dear Life

ENERGY TECH
Naples still full of garbage, despite Berlusconi deal

Berlusconi says deal reached to end Naples garbage crisis

Trailblazing China environmental activist dies

South Africa in race against toxic mine water threat


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement