US Army Gets $7.2 Million For 5–10 Year Plan For Better Energy Storage
The US Army launches new next-generation energy storage research effort, dings fossil fuels along the way.
The US Army launches new next-generation energy storage research effort, dings fossil fuels along the way.
Imagine a USA in which nuclear, wind and solar were cooperating as the natural allies that low-carbon generation sources should be given climate change.
A new research breakthrough from the University of Illinois at Chicago finally delivers some good news for fans of lithium-air technology, which energy storage researchers have been talking up as the next best thing to follow today’s gold standard, lithium-ion.
Argonne National Laboratory’s new Blue Gene/P high-performance computer runs at an awe-inspiring 557 teraflops (557 trillion calculations per second) and can wow the green crowd with its energy efficiency. The computer uses only 1 MW of power— about a third as much electricity as a conventionally built supercomputer of comparable … [continued]