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Form Energy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Form Energy
Company typePrivate
IndustryEnergy
Founded2017; 7 years ago (2017)
Headquarters
Somerville, MA
,
US
Key people
Mateo Jaramillo (CEO)
Websiteformenergy.com

Form Energy is an American energy storage company focused on developing a new class of cost-effective, multi-day energy storage systems that will attempt to enable a reliable and fully-renewable electric grid year-round. Form Energy's commercial product is a rechargeable iron-air battery capable of storing electricity for 100 hours at system costs competitive with legacy power plants.[1]

History

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Form Energy was founded in 2017 by former head of battery development for Tesla Mateo Jaramillo, MIT professor and battery scientist Yet-Ming Chiang, Ted Wiley, William Woodford and Marco Ferrara.[2]

In December 2022, the company announced its first manufacturing plant site: 55 acres in Weirton, West Virginia. The US$760 million project was expected to employ ~750 workers and to begin initial shipments in 2024.[3] The plant's construction will be funded in part by the state of West Virginia with $105 million in surplus tax dollars.[4]

In January 2023, the eight-state utility Xcel Energy contracted for two systems, at Pueblo, Colorado, and at Becker, Minnesota. Each project is to provide 10 megawatts of instantaneous power for up to 100 hours, and store 1 gigawatt-hour.[5]

In 2024, Form engineered a system that converts powdered iron ore to metallic iron using a low-temperature alkaline solution stimulated by electric current. This can be run continuously at high efficiency, and it can be scaled up in smaller increments.[6]

Technology

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The active components of Form Energy's iron-air battery system are iron, water, and air.[7] The basic principle of operation is reversible rusting (oxidation). While discharging, the battery breathes in oxygen from the air and converts iron metal to rust. While charging, the application of an electrical current converts the rust back to iron and the battery breathes out oxygen.[8]

Each individual battery is about the size of a washing machine. Each of these modules is filled with a water-based, non-flammable electrolyte, similar to the electrolyte used in AA batteries. Inside the liquid electrolyte are stacks of between 10 and 20 meter-scale cells, which include iron electrodes and air electrodes, the parts of the battery that enable the electrochemical reactions to store and discharge electricity.[9]

The battery modules are grouped together in modular megawatt-scale power blocks, which comprise thousands of battery modules in an environmentally protected enclosure. Depending on the system size, tens to hundreds of these power blocks will be connected to the electricity grid. In its least dense configuration, a one megawatt system requires about an acre of land. Higher density configurations can achieve greater than three megawatts per acre.[9]

The company has demonstrated that its batteries are capable of storing energy to deliver the 100+ hour duration required to make wind power, hydropower, and solar energy reliable year round, and claims less than 1/10th the cost of lithium-ion battery technology.[10] Cells underwent a UL9540A fire test in 2024.[11]

Finance

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Investors include Breakthrough Energy Ventures, itself funded by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Coatue Management, TPG (through TPG Rise Climate), steel manufacturer ArcelorMittal, Perry Creek Capital, NGP Energy Technology Partners III, Temasek, Energy Impact Partners, Prelude Ventures, MIT’s investment fund The Engine, Capricorn Investment Group, Eni Next, and Macquarie Capital.

In August 2021, Form Energy announced the close of a $240 million Series D financing round led by ArcelorMittal’s XCarb™ innovation fund. In October 2022, they closed a $450 million series E round led by TPG Rise.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Collins, Leigh (2021-07-23). "World's cheapest energy storage will be an iron-air battery, says Jeff Bezos-backed start-up". rechargenews.com. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  2. ^ Gold, Russell (2021-07-22). "Wall Street Journal | Startup Claims Breakthrough in Long-Duration Batteries". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  3. ^ Blain, Loz (2023-01-09). "Form Energy's ultra-cheap iron-air batteries to get $760M factory". New Atlas. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  4. ^ Howell, Craig (2023-02-25). "Justice signs battery bill; $105M toward Form Energy plant project in Weirton". The Parkersburg News and Sentinel. Retrieved 2023-11-19.
  5. ^ "Xcel to install Form's long-duration batteries at retiring coal plants". Canary Media. January 27, 2023. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  6. ^ Spector, Julian (21 May 2024). "Now Form Energy is using its battery tech to clean up iron and steel". Canary Media. Retrieved 2024-05-22.
  7. ^ "The missing piece of the storage puzzle? Multi-day iron-air battery company secures $405M investment". Renewable Energy World. 2024-10-11. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  8. ^ "A "Reversible Rust" Battery That Could Transform Energy Storage - ClearPath". clearpath.org. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  9. ^ a b "Power when the sun doesn't shine". Main. 2024-01-25. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  10. ^ "2024 Climate Tech Companies to Watch: Form Energy and its iron batteries". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  11. ^ Colthorpe, Andy (16 December 2024). "Li-ion BESS from Fluence, iron-air batteries from Form Energy put through fire testing paces". Energy-Storage.News.
  12. ^ Clifford, Catherine (2021-08-25). "Stealthy battery company backed by Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos has a lot to prove". CNBC. Retrieved 2024-10-21.