While some prototypes exist, firms have struggled to commercialise a durable solid-state battery
Some of Britain’s leading battery researchers have teamed up to develop prototype solid-state batteries, in the hope that the UK can take a leading role in the next stage of the electric car industry.
The FTSE 100 chemicals company Johnson Matthey, the Glencore-backed battery startup Britishvolt, and Oxford University are among the seven institutions that have signed a memorandum of understanding promising to work together on the technology.
Continue reading…
While some prototypes exist, firms have struggled to commercialise a durable solid-state battery
Some of Britain’s leading battery researchers have teamed up to develop prototype solid-state batteries, in the hope that the UK can take a leading role in the next stage of the electric car industry.
The FTSE 100 chemicals company Johnson Matthey, the Glencore-backed battery startup Britishvolt, and Oxford University are among the seven institutions that have signed a memorandum of understanding promising to work together on the technology. Continue reading…Technology | The Guardian