Google X Spins Off Malta Molten Salt Energy Storage Business

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

X, the division of Google that focuses on so-called “moonshot” programs, has been working for several years on an energy storage system that uses molten salt. That initiative, called Malta, has now been spun off into a separate standalone business outside of the Google framework.

Molten salt is the core technology behind many concentrated solar power installations. In simple terms, such systems use the heat the sun’s rays create and store it for use later. Such time shifting is essential for renewables to put to bed traditional fossil fuel–powered generating facilities.

“At X we support our projects through the early stage prototyping and de-risking of their ideas, and then we help them find whatever business path or structure works best for the type of problem they’re working on,” a company spokesperson says. “In Malta’s case, we’re looking forward to cheering them on as an independent company focused on developing an affordable and reliable way to store renewable energy  —  something that requires partners with very specialized skills and expertise.”

Malta & Innovation

While it was part of X, the Project Malta team explored a number of designs and prototypes. It also worked with utility companies and grid operators to better understand how energy storage fits into the overall goal of providing electricity when and where it is needed.

Malta energy storage

According to 9to5Google, the Malta system can store energy for more than 6 hours and can be charged thousands of times before its performance begins to degrade, giving it an estimated service life of more than 20 years. The heat stored in the molten salt can be converted back to electricity on an as-needed basis at any time.

The Role Of Robert Laughlin

As reported by Renewable Energy News, the Malta energy storage project is based on research done by Robert Laughlin, a Nobel prize-winning physicist. He met X representatives at a conference a few years ago where they discussed the idea. Laughlin became a consultant for the project — which consisted of a team of 10 engineers — and has endorsed the designs the Malta team has created.

The thermodynamics of the system are well known. What Malta has done is take the esoteric — and costly — components usually needed to make such a system work and replaced them with conventional materials that are much less expensive. The key is reducing the overall operating temperatures while maintaining the thermodynamic efficiency needed to make the system work efficiently.

A Fridge & A Jet

Such a system can be as small as a two-car garage or as large as a traditional power plant. The prototype created by the Malta team uses 4 vertical tanks connected by pipes to a heat pump. “Think of this, at a very simple level, as a fridge and a jet,” said Julian Green, the product manager for Malta.

Two of the tanks are filled with salt and two are filled with antifreeze. The system takes electricity and turns it into separate streams of hot and cold air. The hot air heats up the salt while the cold air cools the antifreeze. The secret that makes the whole thing work is that the process is reversible. When that happens, hot air and cold air rush together creating a high velocity torrent that spins a turbine to create electricity.

“The thermodynamic physics are well-known to anyone who studied it enough in college,” Green says. “The trick is doing it at the right temperatures, with cheap materials. That is super compelling.”

Chip in a few dollars a month to help support independent cleantech coverage that helps to accelerate the cleantech revolution!

Is There A Business Case?

Why bother? The business case for the Malta system is that is could do what lithium-ion storage batteries like the Tesla Powerpack can do, but at far less cost. That’s the theory, anyway. In reality, battery costs are falling rapidly and already quite competitive, and the Malta system does not have the frequency control and grid stabilization capabilities of battery storage systems. “It could potentially compete with lithium-ion,” said Bloomberg New Energy Finance analyst Yayoi Sekine. “But there are a lot of challenges that an emerging technology has to face.”

Nevertheless, some high-powered investors have participated in the spin-off of Malta into a separate company. Renewable Energy News says Malta has raised $26 million in its initial funding round, which was led by Breakthrough Energy Ventures. That fund counts such luminaries as Jeff Bezos, Michael Bloomberg, Masayoshi Son, and Ray Dalio among its investors. Bill Gates chairs its board of directors. Other backers include Concord New Energy Group based in Hong Kong and Alfa Laval, a Swedish industrial company.

Fear Of Innovation

No doubt the fact that Malta was created by X and has the power of Google behind it helped convince people to invest in the new company. But Robert Laughlin is sanguine about the new company’s prospects for success. Before X decided to get involved, he had approached several other potential investors and venture capital firms.

But everyone he talked to was put off not by the challenges of the technology but the difficulty of convincing the very staid management of utility companies to consider anything new. His ideas were also threatening to the fossil fuel companies who supply the coal and natural gas to those utilities. “What we’re talking about here is engines and oil companies — big dinosaurs with very long teeth,” says Laughlin. But then, “A blessing came out of the sky. X came in and took a giant bite out of this problem.”

Will Malta prove successful? No one knows and it is still early days for this technology. But Laughlin’s talk of dinosaurs with big teeth gives us a glimpse of the hurdles all renewable energy companies are facing as they try to transition the world to clean energy. The thing the established energy companies fear more than climate change, rising fuel costs, or regulators is innovation. Malta and others like it have a long way to go and are short on time to get there if the Earth has any hope of not becoming an uninhabitable cinder.


Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.

Latest CleanTechnica TV Video


Advertisement
 
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.

Steve Hanley

Steve writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his home in Florida or anywhere else The Force may lead him. He is proud to be "woke" and doesn't really give a damn why the glass broke. He believes passionately in what Socrates said 3000 years ago: "The secret to change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old but on building the new." You can follow him on Substack and LinkedIn but not on Fakebook or any social media platforms controlled by narcissistic yahoos.

Steve Hanley has 5456 posts and counting. See all posts by Steve Hanley