The test makes standalone electric vehicle charging stations viable even in remote and inaccessible parts of the country.
Australian Vanadium Ltd (ASX:AVL) subsidiary VSUN Energy has seized on the ‘missing piece of the renewable energy jigsaw’, successfully testing an electric vehicle (EV) battery charged using renewable energy supplied by a vanadium redox flow battery (VRFB).
Expansion of EV infrastructure in a country as vast as Australia has long been hampered by the tyranny of distance.
The test involved the use of a 5kW-30kWh VRFB powered solely by solar energy to charge a Tesla EV, and paves the way for standalone electric vehicle charging stations to be located even in the remotest parts of the country.
VSUN Energy is collaborating with its Singaporean partner V-Flow Tech and EV specialists Gemtek to bring the project to market.
VRFB facts
The VRFB is well-suited to the capture and storage of large quantities of renewable energy, enabling stable power output.
Charge is stored in the battery in vanadium electrolyte which doesn’t degrade, meaning that thousands of EV batteries can be charged from the one station.
The VRFB’s long life, exceeding 20 years, makes it one of the most sustainable and enduring ways of storing renewable energy – and at the end of the battery’s mechanical life, the vanadium electrolyte can be reused indefinitely.
The batteries can handle high temperatures without the risk of explosion.
These batteries are an Australian invention, attributed to Professor Maria Skyllas Kazacos at the University of NSW and developed in the 1980s.
Vanadium in demand
The versatility of the VRFB does not stop at EV charging – the technology has the capacity to be scaled up to be used in a wide range of larger applications.
VSUN Energy is installing VRFBs into agricultural, commercial, mining and rural residential sites and is working to develop an urban residential battery for construction in Australia.
VSUN Energy’s business development manager Zamien Sumich said that VRFBs were the “missing piece of the renewable energy jigsaw”.
The VSUN Energy EV charging station test comes on the back of Australian Vanadium Limited’s recent announcement to install a standalone power system based on VRFB energy storage technology at IGO Ltd’s nickel operation in Western Australia’s remote Fraser Range region.
Read: Australian Vanadium subsidiary VSUN Energy to trial VRFB standalone power system at major IGO operation
Vanadium is classified as a critical mineral in the global push to net-zero. Increased vanadium consumption in the steel market and its use in VRFBs are set to be major global drivers in emissions reduction.
“This EV charging initiative is part of the company’s strategy to further develop the market for VRFB energy storage technology in Australia,” AVL managing director Vincent Algar said.
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