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Sparton Resources Inc V.SRI

Alternate Symbol(s):  SPNRF

Sparton Resources Inc. is a Canada-based mineral exploration company. The Company is focused on exploring gold projects near producing mines on or near the major gold producing trends in northeastern Ontario and northern Quebec, where it holds interests in three exploration prospects. The Bruell Property, which hosts a new gold discovery. The Oakes and Pense Properties, near Matachewan and Englehart, in Ontario, are in close proximity to Alamos Gold’s producing Young Davidson Mine and the Kirkland Lake gold producing area. The Bruell Property is located in Vauquelin Township, Quebec. The Oakes Gold Property is located in the Matachewan gold mining area of northern Ontario. The Company controls about 32 mining claims and three mining leases in the Matachewan Gold Area. The Pense Property is located in Pense Township, Ontario. The claims are located near the Quebec provincial border, approximately 25 kilometers east of Englehart, Ontario, in the Larder Lake Mining Division.


TSXV:SRI - Post by User

Post by kewlmoedon May 20, 2022 10:20am
168 Views
Post# 34698103

VFRB's Could Be a Big Part of Our Energy Storage Future

VFRB's Could Be a Big Part of Our Energy Storage Future

A clean energy development this week in the San Diego area isn’t much to look at. Workers will deliver four white shipping containers that house battery storage systems. Soon after, workers will hook up the containers so they can store electricity from a nearby solar array.

The part that I care about is the “flow battery” technology inside those shipping containers, developed by ESS Tech Inc., an Oregon startup. Flow batteries have the potential to be an important part of the energy transition because they can provide electricity storage that runs for much longer than the typical four hours of the dominant technology, lithium-ion batteries.

So what is a flow battery? A key design element is the use of two external tanks that contain electrolyte fluids that get pumped through the battery as it charges and discharges.We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every day or once a week, our original stories and digest of the web’s top headlines deliver the full story, for free.

The duration of the battery, which is how long it can run before recharging, increases based on the size of the tanks. Think of this as the battery equivalent of one of those novelty baseball helmets that hold two cans of soda. If you switch out cans of soda for two-liter bottles, you can drink a lot more.

“For the whole machine, what you need to do is add more liquid rather than adding many, many more batteries,” said Jun Liu, a University of Washington professor and a fellow at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. He also is director of the federal government’s Battery500 Consortium, which develops next-generation batteries for electric vehicles.

In contrast to flow batteries, lithium-ion batteries and most other batteries are self-contained, with less flexibility in their design, he said.

Lithium-ion batteries also are highly flammable. Leading flow battery types, like “vanadium redox” flow batteries, have a much lower fire risk. (Vanadium is a metal that doesn’t easily catch on fire, especially when it’s dissolved in a fluid, as it is in a flow battery.)

And one of ESS’ selling points to investors and customers is that it doesn’t rely on rare metals like lithium or vanadium at all. The main ingredients of its fluid are iron, salt and water.

The San Diego area project, developed in partnership with the utility San Diego Gas & Electric, is the largest demonstration of ESS’ technology to date.

Look Inside a Flow Battery

The system will be able to discharge 3 megawatt-hours before being recharged, which is enough electricity to meet the needs of about 100 houses for one day. It includes six shipping containers that house the batteries, the last four of which are scheduled to arrive this week. Each container has stacks of batteries, with tanks of electrolyte fluid for each battery.

ESS also is working on a demonstration project with the utility Portland General Electric in Oregon, which should go online later this year. This will be the debut of a larger and less portable version of the ESS battery called the Energy Center.

Flow batteries can come in many sizes, from as small as a compact refrigerator to as large as stacks of shipping containers. In addition to ESS, the players in this space include Sumitomo Electric of Japan, VRB Energy of Canada and others, a mix of startups and established businesses.

The companies are betting that their technologies can meet the need for energy storage that lasts for eight to 12 hours per charge. The underlying idea is that the grid will need a mix of various storage technologies, with various durations, to fill in the gaps left when wind, solar and other resources are not enough to meet customers’ needs.

That’s a pretty good bet, according to Adarsh Nagarajan, a group manager for power system research at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado.

“Flow batteries are here to stay,” he said.

But he is careful to specify what flow batteries are not: They are not a replacement for lithium-ion batteries. Instead, flow batteries will serve a part of the market that barely exists today for energy storage that can last for eight hours or more, while lithium-ion batteries will continue to be the leaders in shorter-duration storage, electric vehicles and consumer electronics. While lithium-ion batteries can be used for durations of eight hours or more, they are better suited for shorter runs of one to four hours.

One of the biggest obstacles to rapid deployment of flow batteries is cost. A 2020 report from Pacific Northwest lab estimated an installed cost of $551 per kilowatt-hour for a 4 megawatt-hour system. A developer could build a lithium-ion storage system at a lower cost, although there are a number of factors that make this comparison difficult, including a longer life expectancy for a flow battery.

ESS has not disclosed the cost of the San Diego area project. The company has said that it is aiming to get the cost down to $200 per kilowatt-hour by 2025, as Bloomberg reported last year.

Current costs are reasonable enough that utilities and other buyers are stepping forward to finance larger flow batteries than before. Among them, Central Coast Community Energy in California announced in November that it was building three flow battery projects, scheduled to go online in 2026, with no costs disclosed. The projects, with a total of 226 megawatt-hours, would be done in partnership with Concentric Power Inc. of Salinas, California, a designer and builder of microgrids. The design would be a vanadium redox flow battery.

ESS, or Energy Storage Systems, was co-founded in 2011 by Craig Evans and Julia Song, who are married. The two had previously worked together at a manufacturer of fuel cells where Evans was a product designer and Song was a chemist.

ESS worked for years on its technology, with financial help from investors and the government. In 2021, the company held an initial stock offering and hired a CEO, Eric Dresselhuys. It has about 220 employees.

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/19052022/inside-clean-energy-flow-battery/
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