The company claimed to provide a low-cost way to store large amounts of energy (e.g. for an electricity grid) through thousands of battery cycles, and a non-toxic end product made from widely available material inputs and which operates safely and reliably across a wide range of temperatures and operating environments.[2]
In 2011, an individual battery stack was promoted to store 1.5 kWh, a shipping container-sized unit 180 kWh.[4] The battery cannot overheat.[5] The company expected its products to last many charge/discharge cycles,[6] twice as long as a lead-acid battery. Costs were claimed to be about the same as with lead-acid.[7][8]
In October 2014, they announced a new generation with a single stack reaching 2.4 kWh and a multi-stack module holding 25.5 kWh.[9][10]
In 2015, the company announced it would supply batteries for a Hawaii microgrid to serve as backup for a 176-kilowatt solar panel array that would store 1,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity.[11] In April 2015 they announced they have been cradle-to-cradle design certified.[12][13] It was also reported they were reducing headcount.[14]
In June 2017, bidding starting with a stalking horse offer of $2.8 million from an Austrian battery firm, BlueSky Energy.[17] Juline-Titans LLC, reported by Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: affiliate of the China Titans Energy Technology Group identification error was due to the recent creation of Juline-Titans LLC and is not related to the China Titans Energy Technology Group.[clarification needed] The American company's owners chose to pay won the bidding with an offer of $9.16 million keep the inventor, Jay Whitacre with the Aquion Energy products.[clarification needed] The auction price was a small fraction of the reported $190 million in venture capital and debt the company had raised from investors including Bill Gates, Gentry Venture Partners, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Foundation Capital, Bright Capital, Advanced Technology Ventures, Trinity Capital Investment and CapX Partners, Yung’s Enterprise, and Nick and Joby Pritzker.[18][19]
The company was sued in April 2017 for violation of the WARN Act.[20] In August 2017, MIT Technology Review reported that the China Titans acquisition would mean that Aquion "will continue operating as an independent entity, with research and development probably remaining in Pittsburgh. But manufacturing may move elsewhere, potentially somewhere in China."[21]
In September 2017 Juline-Titans closed the East Huntingdon Township facility and moved production to China.[22]
Reports regarding Juline-Titans LLC being a company of Chinese origin continue to hinder progress for Aquion Energy. Wilson-Kramer Army Reserve Center in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania was purchased September 2017 for administration and training, along with other properties in the USA through GSA Auctions, including the former USDA COTTON ANNEX Washington, D.C.
The battery materials are non-toxic.[23] As of early 2014, the cathode used manganese oxide and relies on intercalation reactions. The anode was a titanium phosphate (NaTi2(PO4)3).[24] The electrolyte was <5M NaClO4.[25] A synthetic cotton separator was reported.[26] The electrode layers were unusually thick (>2 mm). The device used Siemenspower inverter technology.[27]
Production
The company set up manufacturing facilities at a former Sony and Volkswagenassembly plant in East Huntingdon, Pennsylvania[28] initially proposing a capacity of 500 megawatt-hours per year in 2013 and 2014.[29] In March 2014, they announced that commercial shipments of batteries would begin in mid-2014,[30] and in May 2014 announced they had shipped 100 units.[31]
In March 2017, Aquion Energy filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, citing the inability to obtain additional funding.[32]
^Bogo, Jennifer; Gertz, Emily (December 2014). "Clean, Cheap Energy Storage". Popular Science. 285 (6): 026. Retrieved 26 December 2014. It's nontoxic, low-cost, and modular, and it can't overheat.