Ann Arbor, Michigan – Accio Energy announced today that it was awarded $4.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). The funding will be used to support Accio Energy’s transformational work developing utility-scale electrohydrodynamic (EHD) wind energy generation systems offering much lower cost offshore energy with a higher capacity factor and significant siting advantages.
“We are thrilled to have the support of ARPA-E in taking the next big step in developing this advanced energy technology that can overcome the cost and siting hurdles limiting the harvest of abundant offshore wind. This work will enable a first-ever sub-commercial scale validation of EHD power generation offshore using EHD technology and position EHD to move towards commercialization,” said Jennifer Baird, CEO, Accio Energy.
Accio Energy received this competitive award from ARPA-E’s 2015 OPEN program, which seeks to ensure that the agency has an opportunity to support innovative energy R&D that falls outside of the topics of its focused technology programs. The objective of the ARPA-E OPEN solicitation is to support the development of potentially disruptive new technologies across the full spectrum of energy applications.
EHD technology uses the wind to separate a mist of positively charged water droplets from excess electrons that form a high voltage direct current source. EHD systems will operate on seawater; be built using high-volume, low-cost automotive heritage advance manufacturing; offer deep-water deployment options and radar compatibility; and be sufficiently robust to survive expected storm conditions. Accio Energy has demonstrated EHD at laboratory scale and commercially relevant powerdensities. The team’s innovative approach could create an entirely new option for low-cost offshore wind to accelerate development of the offshore wind market in the U.S. and globally to mitigate the impact of greenhouse gas emissions and climate change risks.
For additional information about Accio Energy and this project, please visit www.AccioEnergy.com.
ABOUT ACCIO ENERGY
Based on electrohydrodynamic (EHD) charge separation principles, Accio Energy’s wind systems can reduce of the cost of offshore wind power generation and increase the system capacity factor. Without massive spinning blades, Accio’s offshore system is visually unobtrusive and more easily enables a floating option that allows deep-water deployment. Leveraging high-volume, efficient automotive- heritage manufacturing to create modular panels from readily available materials, Accio’s systems will be shipped using standard container-based shipping methods to be assembled and installed in utility scale arrays.
Learn more at: www.AccioEnergy.com
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