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Australian research hub targets fire resistant batteries

Elizabeth Gracie
The University of Wollongong (UOW) has partnered with the Australian Research Council (ARC) to develop fire-resistant, solid-state and aqueous batteries, through the ARC Research Hub in New Safe and Reliable Energy Storage and Conversion Technologies.

The Hub will be led by Professor Ying Chen from Deakin University and has been awarded funding to a total of $5m over a period of five years. 

According to UOW, “The Hub will strategically position Australia as a leader in the emerging energy storage and conversion space, ensuring Australian industry can maintain a competitive advantage and leverage a unique mineral wealth and world-leading technology development position in this critically important sector”.

Professor Zaiping Guo from UOW said that the Research Hub will also address the environmental impact of battery energy conversion and storage technologies. 

“The research will deliver a new generation of technologies for storage, from small scale portable devices to large scale industrial applications, using recycled and natural materials, and eliminating the serious fire risk in current technologies,” said Professor Guo.

The Research Hub is one of five ARC hubs across the country recently announced by Minister for Education Dan Tehan that will broadly apply research findings into the real world. 

According to UOW, the aim is to create a broad variety of commercialisation opportunities, by working directly with existing companies, to boost the Australian economy and potentially transform Australia’s energy industry landscape. 

Minister Tehan said that the Federal Government hoped that the hubs and the partnerships between universities and industry that they would initiative would drive real-world commercial outcomes to drive increased economic growth. 

“Our Government is investing in research that will foster strategic partnerships between university-based researchers and industry organisations, to find practical solutions to challenges facing Australian industry”

“We want universities to be even more entrepreneurial and engaged with industry” he continued. 

Currently, there are thirteen individual industry partners involved with the project which include the Hazer Group, Creswick Quartz, TDA Golden Field, Bolt Technologies, DLG Battery, HBIS Group, Zhuoyue Power New Energy, Oxford Crown Developments, Sicona Battery Technologies and Sustainable Energy Equities. 

The University of Sydney, University of Adelaide, University of Queensland and University of Southern Queensland are also all involved with the project. 
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