Zink-Energiespeicherbatterie eos
Eos Energy Enterprises, Inc. designs, manufactures, and markets zinc-based energy storage solutions for utility-scale, microgrid, and commercial and industrial (C&I) applications in the United States.
What is EOS Energy Storage?
Eos is accelerating the shift to clean energy with zinc-powered energy storage solutions. Safe, simple, durable, flexible, and available, our commercially-proven, U.S.-manufactured battery technology overcomes the limitations of conventional lithium-ion in 3- to 12- hour intraday applications.
What is Eos Z3 battery?
It’s the intraday market’s only U.S.-designed and -manufactured—and fully-commercialized—alternative to lithium-ion and lead-acid monopolar batteries for critical 3- to 12-hour discharge duration applications. Our latest generation Eos Z3 battery module sets new standards in simplicity, safety, durability, flexibility, and availability.
What makes EOS a good battery?
Safe, simple, durable, flexible, and available, our commercially-proven, U.S.-manufactured battery technology overcomes the limitations of conventional lithium-ion in 3- to 12- hour intraday applications. It’s how, at Eos, we’re putting American ingenuity to work every day to create a positive future for everyone.
What is a zinc based battery?
Instead, the primary ingredient is zinc, which ranks as the fourth most produced metal in the world. Zinc-based batteries aren’t a new invention—researchers at Exxon patented zinc-bromine flow batteries in the 1970s—but Eos has developed and altered the technology over the last decade.
Are EOS batteries sustainable?
Fully recyclable at the end of their usable life, Eos batteries are a truly sustainable solution. Power that stacks up. Z3 battery modules are the building blocks of all of our ingenious energy storage systems. Our standard Z3 strings are racked in a variety of configurations to form our Eos Cube, Eos Hangar, and Eos Stack solutions.
Are zinc-based batteries a new invention?
Zinc-based batteries aren’t a new invention—researchers at Exxon patented zinc-bromine flow batteries in the 1970s—but Eos has developed and altered the technology over the last decade. Zinc-halide batteries have a few potential benefits over lithium-ion options, says Francis Richey, vice president of research and development at Eos.