UniEnergy Technologies

Former gridscale Battery manufacturer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

UniEnergy Technologies (UET) was a U.S. vanadium redox flow battery manufacturer in Mukilteo, Washington, which manufactured megawatt-scale energy storage systems for utility, commercial and industrial customers. The company was founded in 2012 by Dr. Gary Yang and Dr. Liyu Li to commercialize a new Vanadium electrolyte formulation the pair had developed while working at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The new formulation, a mixed-acid solution, was patented by PNNL and the patent was licensed to UET for commercialization.[1][2] The mixed-acid vanadium electrolyte allows for a wider temperature range for operations, and double the energy density of the traditional vanadium electrolyte.[3]

Company typeLLC
Founded2012, 14 years ago
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
UniEnergy Technologies
Company typeLLC
IndustryRenewable Energy
Founded2012, 14 years ago
HeadquartersMukilteo, Washington
Key people
Gary Yang (Founder, CTO) Rick Winter (President, CEO)
ProductsReFlex Flow Battery
Number of employees
52
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The 1 MW 4 MWh containerized vanadium flow battery owned by Avista Utilities and manufactured by UniEnergy Technologies.

The company had designed a megawatt-scale flow battery using this new electrolyte for the purpose of allowing rapid deployment, manufacturing repeatability and lower costs.[4] The company also employed an R&D team which worked to make advances on the electrolyte chemistry and stack design.[3]

UET had a subsidiary in Germany, Vanadis Power which provides sales and services for Europe. The company had partnerships with Bolong New Materials, a vanadium electrolyte manufacturer, and Rongke Power, the Chinese vanadium flow battery stack manufacturer.[1][5] In December 2015 the company completed their B round funding series which included a major investment from Orix Corp.[6] In October 2021, UniEnergy filed for involuntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy, listing no assets or debts.[7]

Products

UniEnergy sold a 10kW, 34kWh fully integrated flow battery called the ReFlex. This product was sized to be a building block for commercial and utility scale deployments from kilowatts to multi-megawatt installations.[8]

References

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