Friday, November 22, 2024
Infrastructure and TechnologyLatestNews

Allye reveals more details of battery system

Clean tech firm Allye has revealed more technical details about its ‘energy-storage-as-a-service’ product the Max, as it completes the first prototype in just four months.

The product, which was shown on a recent edition of The Fully Charged Show, has a capacity of more than 300kWh, a three-phase output of at least 100kVa, and gross weight under 3.5t, including trailer, with capability to be towed on a standard driver’s licence.

Information from Allye states it can provide self-learning on-grid energy storage, localised on-grid network energy storage, and buffer energy storage on-grid for construction and EV charging sites to avoid network upgrades, reduce peak demand charges, and connect to grid faster.

With it also providing flexible off-grid power to decarbonise operations, such as utilities, and film and TV production with zero-emissions, silent power, replacing diesel generators, the Max potentially lowers energy costs by up to 50%, with the lowest lifecycle CO2e of any ESS by up to 60%, the firm claims.

Combing multiple batteries in one system, it has nickel-rich and LFP cell chemistries together with batteries managed through a proprietary battery management system that maximises efficiency and performance characteristics of each chemistry. The Max can also be connected in parallel to increase capacity and provide continuous power.

Lorenzo Bergamaschi, CTO of Allye commented: “Our objective is to give every EV battery another chance to deliver what it was designed to do. As battery experts, we have engineered a unique approach that allows us to build systems that provide flexibility and circularity at their core, by integrating batteries of mixed chemistries, mixed voltage ranges, varying capacity and mixed state-of-health. This allows us to optimise the behaviour of the system depending on environmental conditions, to maximise the life, performance and safety”

Jack Levy, COO of Allye commented: “Our design and engineering of the Max has taken the best learnings from automotive and applied it to energy storage systems. We have developed a great looking product that is distinctive and unique. We have built a robust supply chain and the capability to produce the Max at scale, to delivers a superior product, with lower emissions and at a highly competitive cost.”

Jonathan Carrier, CEO of Allye commented: “Our cloud intelligence enables our innovative energy storage systems to deliver maximum utilisation, lowest cost and CO2 emissions over its lifecycle. Together with our suite of unique hardware technologies Allye is helping transform our energy system while delivering demand- side flexibility and lower electricity bills for all. We are taking our first steps towards the creation of a democratic platform that will allow everyone to access clean, green, renewable energy – creating a sustainable community at scale.”

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