Silicon Valley Startup Plans 3D-Printed Solid-State Battery Gigafactories
Silicon Valley startup Sakuú says that it has set up a pilot facility for 3D-printed solid-state batteries — the first in the world. That approach would be a big twist in the battery world if commercially competitive, both because solid-state batteries have been little more than a futurist’s dreams up till now and because 3D printing has not been the method of preference for manufacturing batteries. So, until real scale and commercial competitiveness is achieved, it will only be natural for battery industry followers to approach Sakuú with a full-sized helping of skepticism.
That said, Sakuú reports that it did just open “a state-of-the-art multi-faceted engineering hub for its battery platform printing initiatives in Silicon Valley” and claims that this hub will “serve as the gateway for at-scale battery printing gigafactories around the world.” It wouldn’t be the first technological marvel to come out of Silicon Valley.
While plans are as good as a contract written with disappearing ink in the tech world, a pilot battery production facility Sakuú opened a year ago is already producing 3D-printed solid-state batteries for real customers. The new “engineering hub” will take that to the next level and act as the company’s true headquarters. “The new facility will showcase two of Sakuu’s flagship products. First, Sakuu’s innovative Kavian platform — the world’s first at-scale 3D printing platform capable of rapidly printing safe, ultra-high energy density solid-state batteries in custom shapes and sizes. Second, Sakuu’s non-battery manufacturing platforms capable of producing medical devices, IoT sensors, and other cutting-edge electrical devices — produced in a highly sustainable and efficient manner.”
Sakuú had raised $62 million by the fall of last year. “Using its newfound investment, the company aims to fund the launch of its first-gen solid-state batteries (SSBs) in H2 2022, as well as the future release of its second iteration battery 3D printer,” 3D Printing Industry writes. “The company appears to be on the track it has planned out. With twice the energy density and 30% less weight than existing Li-ion cells, the firm’s second-gen batteries have potential residential and industrial applications, within energy storage, microreactors and electronics.” Sakuú is also targeting use in electric vehicles as well, but no clear partnerships have been noted at this point.
As far as scale, the young company aims to reach a battery production capacity of 60 GWh by 2028. That’s almost double the