Argonne National Laboratory to lead national energy storage hub

UChicago part of partnership to pave the way for safe, powerful, sustainable batteries

The U.S. Department of Energy has selected Argonne National Laboratory to spearhead the Energy Storage Research Alliance (ESRA), one of two new Energy Innovation Hubs.

This energy innovation hub unites top researchers from three national labs and 12 universities, including the University of Chicago, to address pressing battery challenges.

ESRA brings together nearly 50 world-class researchers from three national laboratories and 12 universities to provide the scientific underpinning to address the nation’s most pressing battery challenges, including safety, high-energy density and long-duration batteries made from inexpensive, abundant materials.

“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, ESRA director, chief scientist of the Argonne Collaborative Center for Energy Storage Science and professor at the Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering at the University of Chicago. ​“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.”

Leveraging decades of national investment in basic sciences, ESRA seeks to enable transformative discoveries in materials chemistry, gain a fundamental understanding of electrochemical phenomena at the atomic scale and lay the scientific foundations for breakthroughs in energy storage technologies.

The Argonne-led hub will also 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.

The hub will be funded up to $62.5 million for up to five years.

Paving the way

The achievement of ESRA’s goals will lead to high-energy batteries that never catch fire, offer days of long-duration storage, have multiple decades of life and are made from inexpensive, abundant materials.

“ESRA will pave the way for innovative energy storage solutions that drive both U.S. prosperity and security,” said Argonne Director Paul Kearns. ​“As the lead laboratory for ESRA under the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, Argonne takes pride in spearheading this collaborative effort that unites world-leading experts and taps the impressive scientific resources available in national labs and academia.”

Argonne is joined in the collaboration by 14 partners that are embedded in all aspects of ESRA: participation in each of the scientific thrusts, governance and development of the hub strategy, and training of the next generation of battery scientists and researchers. The collaboration among national laboratories and universities is crucial to discovering new materials, accelerating technology development and commercializing new energy storage technologies.

In addition to the University of Chicago, the ESRA partners are Columbia University, Duke University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Princeton University, UC San Diego, University of Houston, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Michigan, Utah State University, and Xavier University.

—Adapted from an article published by Argonne National Laboratory.