Yeah, I think massive chemical batteries for storing excess electricity to facilitate a contrived green energy market is a bad idea.

  • scratchee@feddit.uk
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    18 hours ago

    We can all agree on that, Clearly li-ion is a bad choice for static use cases.

    But right now it’s the cheapest option, and it looks likely that will stay true for quite a while unfortunately.

      • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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        12 hours ago

        LIthium Iron Phosphate is cheapest relatively dense battery type. Sodium ion will be if lithium get expensive.

        • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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          2 hours ago

          You can draw an arbitrary line of density you find good enough. But with how much space us wasted in some countries, that line should vary a bit place to place

          • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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            58 minutes ago

            With 40 foot containers providing utility or smaller scale storage solutions of 2.9mwh per container with LFP batteries, that is about 170mwh per acre. Before stacking. I don’t believe a lack of density matters anywhere in the world. Spare space inside buildings is usually sufficient for building needs.

      • scratchee@feddit.uk
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        17 hours ago

        Weirdly it’s not, except maybe gravity batteries where nice reservoirs happen to exist already. It should be but it’s not right now.

        Li-ion has economy of scale right now. I do think molten metal etc will overtake eventually, but they’re currently playing catchup and li-ion has dropped in price so much over time that it’s surprisingly cheap even where it should make no sense.

          • scratchee@feddit.uk
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            6 hours ago

            Dams are a normally a power supply rather than a battery. I was more thinking pumped storage hydro. Which is usually done where theres 2 lakes next to each other at very different heights, so you can “store” power by pumping water up and release by pumping back down.