Natron Energy, a Santa Clara, Calif.-based startup developing a battery using Prussian blue analogue electrodes and a sodium-ion electrolyte, raised $35 million in series D funding led by ABB Technology Ventures, NanoDimension Capital and Volta Energy Technologies. Return backers Chevron Technology Ventures, Khosla Ventures, and Prelude Ventures also participated. Fluxus Ventureshas also invested in the firm which has received a total of more than $50 million in venture funding and more than $5 million in ARPA-E and DOE funding.
Natron is the former Alveo which was founded in 2012, based on work within the Huggins Group by co-founder Dr. Colin Wessells at Stanford University.
Although Prussian blue provides modest energy density, the startup claims that Prussian blue is so earth-available and inexpensive that it could provide a cost-effective and sustainable answer for stationary energy storage.
According to its website, Natron is developing batteries for “data-center UPS, electric forklifts, smart grids/microgrids, and renewables support. Natron’s batteries survive tens of thousands of deep discharge cycles, can be fully charged or discharged in just minutes, and cost significantly less than incumbent lead acid batteries.”
From that description, it appears that Natron is going after lead-acid battery edge cases.
Otherwise, Natron will be competing with the incumbent stationary energy storage technology — lithium ion. U.S. energy storage deployments reached roughly 500 MW in 2019 — of which only a few megawatts were non-lithium-ion chemistries. Lithium-ion batteries have their disadvantages — high reactivity, conflict minerals and environmental risk — but they are the clear-cut dominant winner in today’s battery race.
Dislodging lithium ion
Investors seem fascinated by energy storage this year, the long-duration variety in particular. Within the last few months, we’ve seen these energy storage investments.
- Eos Energy Storage with its four- to six-hour duration zinc battery chemistry announced its intention to go public via a SPAC. Eos has spent over $160 million from investors including AltEnergy, Holtec International, Reservoir Capital Group, and Generation Capital .
- Form Energy claims its aqueous air battery provides 150-hour duration storage. Form Energy intends on deploying a 1 MW/150 MWh system with a Minnesota utility before 2023, an unprecedented energy storage duration if successful. Form has raised over $50 million in funding from investors Eni Next, MIT’s The Engine, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Prelude Ventures, Capricorn Investment Group and Macquarie Capital.
- Quidnet looks to use “excess” renewable energy to store pressurized-water under ground at dry oil and gas wells. Bill Gates led a $10M investment in the startup.
- QuantumScape, a solid-state lithium ion battery builder, received up to $200 million from Volkswagen last month. Other investors in QuantumScape include Kleiner Perkins, Prelude Ventures, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Capricorn Investment Group, and Khosla Ventures.
Natron is hiring.
Author: Eric Wesoff
This content is protected by copyright and may not be reused. If you want to cooperate with us and would like to reuse some of our content, please contact: editors@pv-magazine.com.
By submitting this form you agree to pv magazine using your data for the purposes of publishing your comment.
Your personal data will only be disclosed or otherwise transmitted to third parties for the purposes of spam filtering or if this is necessary for technical maintenance of the website. Any other transfer to third parties will not take place unless this is justified on the basis of applicable data protection regulations or if pv magazine is legally obliged to do so.
You may revoke this consent at any time with effect for the future, in which case your personal data will be deleted immediately. Otherwise, your data will be deleted if pv magazine has processed your request or the purpose of data storage is fulfilled.
Further information on data privacy can be found in our Data Protection Policy.