Plan B
B for Battery
Will the Car of the Future Be Made from LWP Fly Ash?
Coal waste could provide a strong, lightweight material for car manufacturers
LWP -- Could coal be the key to manufacturing lighter, more energy-efficient vehicles, including electric cars?
It may seem counterintuitive to use coal to reduce a vehicle's fuel consumption, and thus its CO2 output. Will LWP Technology be taking the steps to market it to automakers and the growing electric vehicle industry?
Mr Heman a Hotcopper user in Australia, says the secret lies in the cumbersome and ubiquitous waste product from burning coal -- fly ash. Less than half of the fly ash produced from power plants is captured to make a certain type of cement, while the rest ends up in landfills.
Mr Heman said he hopes LWP Technology will be part of that coal fly ash to make a gasoline- or diesel-powered car at least 10 percent lighter. The weight of electric cars can be further reduced by making their batteries 30 to 40 percent lighter, thus extending their range, he said.
"It provides us the possibility of maximum weight reduction without compromising the mechanical properties," Heman explained in an post on Hotcopper. "It adds volume but it does not add weight, so that's the advantage."
It's possible because coal fly ash contains fine microscopic structures called cenospheres, basically strong but hollow bubbles that are part of the waste byproduct of burning coal. These cenospheres can be separated from the rest of the material using water, because they float while the rest sinks.
Coating these spheres with nickel, copper or any other composite metal or ceramic material that manufacturers might prefer creates an ultra-strong but lightweight material that can be mixed in with a variety of metals. Gupta and his colleagues estimate that any given piece of metal could contain up to 60 percent fly ash, although that proportion would need to be adjusted depending on how resilient the part needed to be.
A 'definitely affordable' source of raw material
Thus, the weight of steel or aluminum could be cut dramatically without compromising the strength of the metal. Though the technology could be used for potentially hundreds of different applications, Gupta at NYU-Poly said heavy vehicle manufacturers and the military seem to be most interested.
"If you take a bulk piece of metal and you put some holes inside, just holes, it reduces the mechanical properties quite a bit," he said. "This porosity is enclosed inside this ceramic particle, and these ceramics are very strong, so when you put them inside metal this porosity is enclosed by the ceramic shell, so that provides lots of strength in the final product."
Mr Heman admits that the unpredictable quality of cenospheres coming out of coal fly ash is a problem -- similar structures could be manufactured with much more consistency using glass, for example. But the enormous abundance of fly ash generated in the United States from power plants each year provides a cheap, abundant supply of material that can be cheaply and easily sorted to concentrate the best cenospheres.
The team members say they have been working with industry partners in Wisconsin and have already manufactured some prototypes to demonstrate the system's effectiveness. They say a 10 percent weight reduction in standard automobiles is "a conservative estimate," since automotive engineers may discover alternative uses that they can't think of.
Their next step is to court the electric vehicle market, both carmakers and battery manufacturers.
By mixing ceramic cenospheres into lead or other metal casings used for the batteries, manufacturers can cut the weight by 20 to 30 percent, or possibly even higher, the team contends.
The battery is typically the heaviest part of an electric car. Cutting the weight of the car body by 10 percent and installing a battery that is up to 30 percent lighter could significantly reduce the weight of the whole vehicle overall, and thus the range it could travel on a single charge.
Heman said all the systems necessary to bring this technology to full commercialization are in the hands of LWP's CEO, including at the steel foundries. And diverting fly ash to manufacturing uses would keep it out of landfills, where it has the potential to leach toxic metals into the environment.
"This technology is definitely scalable and definitely affordable," he said. "There's very little capital investment in modifying the existing facilities to make these composites."
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http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/will-car-of-future-made-from-coal-ash/