Microsoft's New Battery is a Test of AI-Infused Scientific Discovery (fastcompany.com) 29
Harry McCracken, writing for FastCompany: Recently, Microsoft built a clock. Well, "built" may be overstating things. Members of the company's quantum computing team found a small digital clock in a wood case on Amazon -- the kind you might mistake for a nicer-than-usual trade show tchotchke. They hacked it to run off two experimental batteries they'd created in collaboration with staffers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). Then they dressed up its enclosure by adding the logo of Azure Quantum Elements, the Microsoft platform for AI-enhanced scientific discovery that had been instrumental in developing the new battery technology.
The point of this little DIY project was to prove the batteries worked in a visceral way: "You want to have a wow moment," explains Brian Bilodeau, the head of partnerships, strategy, and operations for Azure Quantum. And the person the quantum team hoped to wow was Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. Not that getting Nadella's attention was such a daunting prospect. Throwing vast amounts of Azure high-performance computing (HPC) resources at a big, hairy technical challenge such as materials research is the sort of challenge he's predisposed to take a personal interest in. Still, the tangible evidence of success made for a memorable moment: "I was very, very excited to see it come through," Nadella remembers.
The coin-sized CR2032 batteries powering the clock looked like the ones you might find in a pocket calculator or garage door opener. But on the inside, they used a solid-state electrolyte that replaces 70% of the lithium in garden-variety batteries with sodium. That holds the potential to address multiple issues with lithium batteries as we know them: their limited life on a charge, shrinking capacity over time, subpar performance in extreme temperatures, and risk of catching fire or even exploding. In addition, reducing lithium use in favor of cheap, plentiful sodium could be a boon to the fraught battery supply chain. With further development, the new material could benefit the myriad aspects of modern life that depend on batteries, from smartphones to EVs to the power grid. But Microsoft, being Microsoft, regards all this promise first and foremost as proof of Azure Quantum Elements' usefulness to the customers it's designed to serve. Unveiled last June, the cloud service is currently a "private preview" being tested by organizations such as Britain's Johnson Matthey, which is using it to help design catalytic converters and hydrogen fuel cells.
The point of this little DIY project was to prove the batteries worked in a visceral way: "You want to have a wow moment," explains Brian Bilodeau, the head of partnerships, strategy, and operations for Azure Quantum. And the person the quantum team hoped to wow was Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. Not that getting Nadella's attention was such a daunting prospect. Throwing vast amounts of Azure high-performance computing (HPC) resources at a big, hairy technical challenge such as materials research is the sort of challenge he's predisposed to take a personal interest in. Still, the tangible evidence of success made for a memorable moment: "I was very, very excited to see it come through," Nadella remembers.
The coin-sized CR2032 batteries powering the clock looked like the ones you might find in a pocket calculator or garage door opener. But on the inside, they used a solid-state electrolyte that replaces 70% of the lithium in garden-variety batteries with sodium. That holds the potential to address multiple issues with lithium batteries as we know them: their limited life on a charge, shrinking capacity over time, subpar performance in extreme temperatures, and risk of catching fire or even exploding. In addition, reducing lithium use in favor of cheap, plentiful sodium could be a boon to the fraught battery supply chain. With further development, the new material could benefit the myriad aspects of modern life that depend on batteries, from smartphones to EVs to the power grid. But Microsoft, being Microsoft, regards all this promise first and foremost as proof of Azure Quantum Elements' usefulness to the customers it's designed to serve. Unveiled last June, the cloud service is currently a "private preview" being tested by organizations such as Britain's Johnson Matthey, which is using it to help design catalytic converters and hydrogen fuel cells.
so, in just a few words (Score:3)
highly paid microsoft employees put batteries in a clock off ebay and the batteries are similar to those some chinese ( https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org] ) put in an electric car?
so what?
Re: so, in just a few words (Score:1)
Re: so, in just a few words (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
MS vs. Potato Technology (Score:2)
How long does the battery last again? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
*source: https://www.pnnl.gov/news-medi... [pnnl.gov]
Corporate Pseudalism? (Score:4, Insightful)
This has got to be fake journalism straight out of Microsoft's PR department. This is exactly the kind of bullshit Slashdot is supposed to ridicule and piss on, not publish as though it were real.
Re:Corporate Pseudalism? (Score:5, Funny)
Let's be fair, it is quite likely a nice show case of the capabilities AI-infused "creative PR writing". Certainly sounds like degenerative AI to me.
Re: (Score:3)
My thoughts precisely. Should have been titled Microsoft puff piece. Whatever happened to that unhackable OS the Microsoft science division was designing. Never mind, it got good publicity at the time.
Raises hand: About that fire/exploding thing .. (Score:2)
But on the inside, they used a solid-state electrolyte that replaces 70% of the lithium in garden-variety batteries with sodium. That holds the potential to address multiple issues with lithium batteries ... and risk of catching fire or even exploding.
What form is the sodium in 'cause doesn't it react more violently than lithium in, say, water?
Re: Raises hand: About that fire/exploding thing . (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
What form is the sodium in 'cause doesn't it react more violently than lithium in, say, water?
What do you mean by "violent"?
Sodium releases its energy orders of magnitude faster than lithium.
For the same amount of stored energy, a sodium fire would expend and extinguish itself quickly, while lithium will continue burning.
*IF* the amount of lithium was small enough that the time it would react remains short enough to be manageable, only then would you consider the energy being released at a lower amount for a longer time to be an advantage.
So perhaps a phone sized battery would be preferable to have
Re: (Score:2)
So a higher temperature burn for a far far shorter time
We sometimes call that an explosion (deflagration [wikipedia.org] to be precise).
Re: (Score:2)
Lithium ion batteries don't contain elemental lithium. It's a metal oxide, e.g. LiCoO2. Likewise, the sodium in a sodium ion battery is some kind of sodium salt. These batteries are some variation of NaLiYCl6 where there are x sodiums, x-3 lithiums and some other stuff (Y).
Re: (Score:2)
Lithium ion batteries don't contain elemental lithium. It's a metal oxide, e.g. LiCoO2. Likewise, the sodium in a sodium ion battery is some kind of sodium salt. These batteries are some variation of NaLiYCl6 where there are x sodiums, x-3 lithiums and some other stuff (Y).
Thanks, that was the info I didn't know and was looking for!
Re: (Score:2)
Here's the paper if you want:
https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.040... [arxiv.org]
The abstract provided my quota of self-congratulatory blah blah for the day so I didn't read the rest of it, but if you can get past that there might be some interesting stuff. Or references to the actual material science.
BIOS Battery? (Score:1)
WOW. I'm impressed. Mine all still work though.
Harry McCracken? (Score:2)
He must be related to Phil McCracken.
We found ... (Score:2)
Recently, Microsoft built a clock. Well, "built" may be overstating things.
Lost art of composition. (Score:3)
What is this about?
A DIY project?
AI research?
Azure?
A CEO attention trick?
Or?
What did the AI have to do with this? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Clarendon Dry Pile (Score:2)
Contentless drivel (Score:2)
Least informative article of the day.