1. How complicated can a two-terminal DC source be?
Have you ever stared at a battery that is located in your car or some handheld electronic device and wondered what the big deal is? As electrified transportation quickly envelops and drives the entire electronics industry, it seems more and more common to hear of not only economics but also the bleeding-edge designs and even the full supply chains (from raw material sourcing to end-of-life recycling) completely revolving around these devices. As we deploy many billions of tiny systems, commonly referred to as the Internet of Things (IoT)/ Industrial IoT (IIoT), the ability to run entire wireless sensor networks (WSN) off a tiny capacitor is an exciting prospect intertwined with the apocalyptic scenario of tossing ~100M batteries A DAY into the landfills of the world.
But even as one starts to see batteries take the center stage in many critical applications and market-driving use cases, they may still look at this basic-looking DC-source with only two terminals, and have a hard time resolving what all the fuss around batteries is about. As we shall come to see over the course of this article, there are plenty of reasons why batteries (and energy storage or ES, overall) should never be taken for granted. The first, obvious reason for this is that nothing in the electronic world runs without power, so being able to source and store energy is a necessity. Perhaps, not top of the mind until the last decade or so, but safety is a mission-critical requirement in just about any application, and therefore, it can be closely tied to the densest source of energy in the system. Even further from the purview of the many design considerations is the strategy of utilizing energy storage at multiple levels to reduce system sizes, maximize uptimes, and reduce the overall infrastructure (capital and operational expenditure or CAPEX/OPEX) savings.
ES is a huge topic that cannot be done justice to in a single, brief whitepaper, even though this one will serve to provide a solid overview of the fundamentals. But even fundamentally, focusing on basic physics alone still casts a very wide net to comprehensively cover all the major categories from MEMS-scale to utility-scale storage. Energy can be stored and converted from every type afforded to us by the physical world (even if not always pragmatic), whether be it in the form of electrochemical reaction (or other means of electrical potential), heat, light, radio frequency (RF), or potential energy/ motion/ electrodynamics. Wikipedia defines “energy storage” [1] as “…the capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time to reduce imbalances between energy demand and energy production.”
Though this whitepaper will focus on energy storage solutions at the system level, it should be noted that thinking of all forms of energy as conservation that merely transfers/changes state, with some typically spent in the conversion/transfer process, is a worthwhile approach. This is not meant to sound like a fancy paraphrasing of the first law of thermodynamics but is rather intended to serve as an inspirational mantra that drives one to seek the perpetual optimization of energy storage and consumption as an overarching and constant objective.
Another area in which energy storage tends to be an outlier, compared to most of the other aspects of system advancement, is the rate at which significant, generational improvements in energy density occur. Moore’s Law keeps logic shrinking at an exponential pace and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) shrink and integrate sensors to the point of being nearly invisible to the naked eye. Unfortunately, this kind of exponential improvement from one generation to the next does not bode well for energy storage solutions. Energy storage is directly limited by chemistry and physics, which tend to double on a timeline closer to a decade than a year. In general, the main goal in implementing and optimizing an energy storage solution is to keep the chemistry happy, but we shall discuss more what this means later.
As alluded to earlier, energy storage has an ever-increasing role in driving sustainable electronics and in the fight against climate change. Even rechargeable batteries tend to contain hazardous materials and may require rare-earth elements, whose global, lifetime supply exceeds demand (e.g., recycling is critical here), and may consume a whole lot of landfill space. As the number of non-tethered applications/ devices increases exponentially, so will all the associated energy storage, which multiplies the sustainability challenges summarized here. One apparent strategy to address this is by trying and converting the non-rechargeable to rechargeable energy storage solutions to mitigate much of the replacement efforts. Given the increased focus and attention on sustainability topics these days, even the very conservative industries dictating massive amounts of ES (with redundancy) are looking for ways to utilize energy storage more intelligently to meet uptime targets, while still reducing overall infrastructure.
Now that the bar has been set somewhat, let us shift our focus to the most ubiquitous forms of system-level energy storage - and consider what they are, how to deal with them, and the key items to look for while optimizing a system design.
But even as one starts to see batteries take the center stage in many critical applications and market-driving use cases, they may still look at this basic-looking DC-source with only two terminals, and have a hard time resolving what all the fuss around batteries is about. As we shall come to see over the course of this article, there are plenty of reasons why batteries (and energy storage or ES, overall) should never be taken for granted. The first, obvious reason for this is that nothing in the electronic world runs without power, so being able to source and store energy is a necessity. Perhaps, not top of the mind until the last decade or so, but safety is a mission-critical requirement in just about any application, and therefore, it can be closely tied to the densest source of energy in the system. Even further from the purview of the many design considerations is the strategy of utilizing energy storage at multiple levels to reduce system sizes, maximize uptimes, and reduce the overall infrastructure (capital and operational expenditure or CAPEX/OPEX) savings.
ES is a huge topic that cannot be done justice to in a single, brief whitepaper, even though this one will serve to provide a solid overview of the fundamentals. But even fundamentally, focusing on basic physics alone still casts a very wide net to comprehensively cover all the major categories from MEMS-scale to utility-scale storage. Energy can be stored and converted from every type afforded to us by the physical world (even if not always pragmatic), whether be it in the form of electrochemical reaction (or other means of electrical potential), heat, light, radio frequency (RF), or potential energy/ motion/ electrodynamics. Wikipedia defines “energy storage” [1] as “…the capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time to reduce imbalances between energy demand and energy production.”
Though this whitepaper will focus on energy storage solutions at the system level, it should be noted that thinking of all forms of energy as conservation that merely transfers/changes state, with some typically spent in the conversion/transfer process, is a worthwhile approach. This is not meant to sound like a fancy paraphrasing of the first law of thermodynamics but is rather intended to serve as an inspirational mantra that drives one to seek the perpetual optimization of energy storage and consumption as an overarching and constant objective.
Another area in which energy storage tends to be an outlier, compared to most of the other aspects of system advancement, is the rate at which significant, generational improvements in energy density occur. Moore’s Law keeps logic shrinking at an exponential pace and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) shrink and integrate sensors to the point of being nearly invisible to the naked eye. Unfortunately, this kind of exponential improvement from one generation to the next does not bode well for energy storage solutions. Energy storage is directly limited by chemistry and physics, which tend to double on a timeline closer to a decade than a year. In general, the main goal in implementing and optimizing an energy storage solution is to keep the chemistry happy, but we shall discuss more what this means later.
As alluded to earlier, energy storage has an ever-increasing role in driving sustainable electronics and in the fight against climate change. Even rechargeable batteries tend to contain hazardous materials and may require rare-earth elements, whose global, lifetime supply exceeds demand (e.g., recycling is critical here), and may consume a whole lot of landfill space. As the number of non-tethered applications/ devices increases exponentially, so will all the associated energy storage, which multiplies the sustainability challenges summarized here. One apparent strategy to address this is by trying and converting the non-rechargeable to rechargeable energy storage solutions to mitigate much of the replacement efforts. Given the increased focus and attention on sustainability topics these days, even the very conservative industries dictating massive amounts of ES (with redundancy) are looking for ways to utilize energy storage more intelligently to meet uptime targets, while still reducing overall infrastructure.
Now that the bar has been set somewhat, let us shift our focus to the most ubiquitous forms of system-level energy storage - and consider what they are, how to deal with them, and the key items to look for while optimizing a system design.