New battery technologies to be in the focus of the research facility of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in cooperation with Ulm University.
Development of efficient battery systems for future energy supply and mobility is the objective of the Ulm Helmholtz Institute for Electrochemical Energy Storage (HIU). Today, this new research institution celebrated its opening in Ulm. "The new Helmholtz Institute for Electrochemical Energy Storage in Ulm shall be the basis of future high-performance battery generations. This is of high importance to Germany as a location of technology and industry and to Baden-Wuerttemberg with its strong automotive industry," underlined Federal Minister of Research Professor Annette Schavan and Minister President of Baden-Wuerttemberg Stefan Mappus.
The new Ulm Helmholtz Institute is founded and organized by Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), member of the Helmholtz Association, in cooperation with Ulm University. Associated partners are the German Aerospace Center (DLR), also member of the Helmholtz Association, and the Center for Solar Energy and Hydrogen Research Baden-Wuerttemberg (ZSW). A first step towards the close cooperation of these four partners was made in 2009 by establishing the BMBF Alliance of Competence in Electrochemistry for Electromobility in Southern Germany. The new center of viable battery research will be located on the campus of Ulm University and bridge the distance between locations of Ulm and Karlsruhe.
"The Helmholtz Association systematically extends research into batteries and other types of energy storage, as the development of efficient solutions is of decisive strategic importance to securing energy supply and mobility in Germany in a post-fossil era," explained Professor Jürgen Mlynek, President of the Helmholtz Association. "We are also pooling the competences existing in Germany by the close cooperation with universities, our preferred partners. With the setup of the Helmholtz Institute in Ulm, our cooperation with Ulm University is now placed on a stable foundation."
Foundation of the HIU is an integral component of strategic fo-cusing of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology on battery research. Parallel to the establishment of HIU in Ulm, the Competence E project is presently being set up at KIT to extend research into electromobility from individual components to the entire system level. Competence E pursues an integrated approach from the molecule to the battery, to the electric motor, to the functioning electric drive and links the fundamentals with industrial processing and fabrication technologies. The future "research factory" of KIT will close the gaps between university and non-university research and industrial production. The HIU will link excellent fundamental research with application.
As a Helmholtz institution, the HIU will be funded via KIT by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research and the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg at a ratio of 90 to 10. The DLR share will be funded via the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology. The annual budget of the new institute will amount to EUR 5 million.
"This money is spent well, an investment in the future," said Minister Schavan. "It secures tomorrow's mobility – a clean mobility."
"It is not the first time that Baden-Wuerttemberg has pointed the way and been responsible for crucial developments in the field of mobility. With the new institute, our state will once again be among the most important research locations for the development of electromobility in Europe," Minister President Stefan Mappus pointed out.
Together with Ulm University, the state will spend EUR 12 million for a new building in the Ulm Science City that will be ready for occupancy in 2013. It will accommodate up to 80 employees. In this and the coming year, 35 new positions will presumably be established at Ulm and Karlsruhe with a main focus initially lying on fundamental research for new lithium-ion technologies. At the partners involved, a total of 200 scientists work on the development of new battery systems.
Apart from the use of the partners' resources, four new professorships will be established at the HIU, one of which will be funded by the DRL to contribute to the development of energy storage, energy conversion, and electromobility. It is also planned to establish a research training group to specifically prepare young scientists for international competition in battery research.
On the official founding date of January 01, 2011, the HIU Board of Directors started its work. It consists of the Professors Horst Hahn (KIT; Founding Director of HIU), Dieter Kolb (Ulm University), Axel Groß (Ulm University), and Werner Tillmetz (ZSW) as well as the associated members Dr. Andreas Gutsch (KIT) and Professor Ulrich Wagner (DLR). ###
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) is a public corporation and state institution of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It fulfills the mission of a university and the mission of a national research center of the Helmholtz Association. KIT focuses on a knowledge triangle that links the tasks of research, teaching, and innovation.
Contact: Monika Landgraf Monika.Landgraf@kit.edu 49-721-608-47414 Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
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