University to partner in DOE-backed clean energy research hub

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Maximizing the benefits of clean energy requires new ways to store it, and University of Michigan engineers will partner in a new research hub created by the U.S. Department of Energy designed to develop and further battery innovations.

It is one of two new Energy Innovation Hubs led by national laboratories across the country. Argonne National Laboratory will lead the Energy Storage Research Alliance involving 12 universities and two additional national labs.

The hub is being established with $62.5 million in funding over five years from DOE’s Office of Basic Energy Science. The group, including U-M, will tackle key issues in the development of new batteries and energy storage devices.

“The demand for high-performance, low-cost and sustainable energy storage devices is on the rise, especially those with potential to deeply decarbonize heavy-duty transportation and the electric grid,” said Shirley Meng, chief scientist at the Argonne Collaborative Center for Energy Storage Science.

“To achieve this, energy storage technology must reach levels of unprecedented performance, surpassing the capabilities of current lithium ion technology. The key to making these transformative leaps lies in a robust research and development initiative firmly grounded in basic science.”

ESRA will tap U-M’s expertise in battery development, particularly in performance modeling.

“One of the strengths of the U-M team is our multi-faceted expertise in ‘in situ/operando’methods, which allow us to literally ‘see inside’ of a battery as it is operating,” said Neil Dasgupta, associate professor of mechanical engineering and of materials and science engineering in the College of Engineering. “We use a range of probes for these examinations that span length-scales from atoms to centimeters.  

“By combining these in situ analysis methods with electrochemical signatures of battery operation, we can enable new modes of battery analytics and generate unique data sets that can inform computational models, including those aided by machine learning methods.”

U-M engineers also will look to bolster some of the latest alternatives to lithium ion technology.

The Argonne-led hub also will place a central focus on training a diverse, next-generation battery workforce for future manufacturing needs through innovative training programs with industry, academia and government. 

“Cultivating a diverse workforce dedicated to safeguarding America’s energy resilience is key to ESRA’s mission,” said Wei Wang, ESRA deputy director and director of the Energy Storage Materials Initiative at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. “Through our strategic equity and inclusion initiatives, we plan to create a robust training ground for energy storage science from the undergraduate to postdoctoral levels.”

U-M and the other university partners will make crucial contributions in this arena.

“We plan to not only train students enrolled at U-M but will also begin a program for visiting undergraduate students from across the state and the country to work with us at U-M on energy storage research,” said Yiyang Li, assistant professor of materials science and engineering.

Along with Argonne and U-M, ESRA members include: Columbia University; Duke University; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Princeton University; University of California, San Diego; University of Chicago; University of Houston; University of Illinois, Chicago; University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Utah State University; Xavier University; Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

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