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Ohio firms work to boost electric car battery

October 12, 2008 @ 09:30 PM

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (AP) _ General Motors Corp.'s new electric car won't be in showrooms for another two years, but already two sister companies based in this western Ohio community are working to make the Chevrolet Volt better.

GM has said a lithium ion battery will power the Volt up to 40 miles on a single charge, but Applied Sciences Inc. and co-owned Pyrograf Products Inc. want to see if that range can be doubled.

"It's safe to say this is our No. 1 priority," said David Burton, head of research and development for Applied Sciences.

Helped by $1 million in state funding and another $500,000 from GM, the research and development firm headquartered about 20 miles east of Dayton in Greene County has been working for two years on tiny carbon fibers that could make the battery lighter and more efficient.

The threads so thin they cannot be seen without magnification would replace some of the three pounds of carbon in the Volt battery currently under development, company officials said.

"By making the carbon perform better, you can reduce the weight of that component in the battery," said John Mackay, an Applied Sciences spokesman.

GM is keenly interested in reducing the weight of the battery to boost the overall performance of the vehicle, said Mackay, who estimated that the Volt lithium ion battery now weighs in at about 400 pounds. That's already much lighter than the old 800-pound lead acid battery that was a drag on the EV1, an electric-powered car that GM discontinued earlier in the decade.

According to GM, the Volt will travel up to 40 miles on a single charge from a home outlet. As it approaches 40 miles, a small gasoline or E85 ethanol engine will kick in, but purely to recharge the battery and keep the car going for potentially hundreds more miles.

When the vehicle arrives in November 2010, Applied Sciences is hopeful that its technology will be on board.

"GM researchers say they have not seen any carbon materials that have performed as well as ours," Mackay said.

Carbon nanofibers developed for the battery by his company would be manufactured by Pyrograf Products, located just across the street and sharing the same owner as Applied Sciences but with different investors. Pyrograf is in a good position to supply the tiny carbon filaments, as it's the world's third-largest producer of those materials, Mackay said.