Regan ZaneThe U.S. Department of Energy has awarded  Utah State University a $3 million grant to develop technology that could  dramatically improve the battery performance of electric vehicles.

The $3,070,051 award is part of $43 million in funding from the U.S. Department  of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) announced earlier  this month.

“To be among just 12 lead organizations selected for an award  is a high honor,” said Regan Zane, a USTAR professor of computer and electrical  engineering at Utah State University and principal investigator for the project. “Through this three-year program, we’ll develop cell-level power control  architecture that improves electric vehicle battery performance and, as a  result, could decrease battery pack costs by some 25 percent.”

Zane  recently joined the wireless power transfer team at USU, coming from the  University of Colorado at Boulder. “Regan is one of the newest USTAR recruits at  USU, and his winning this significant grant is an indication of the kind of  talent we’re attracting to our campus,” said Robert T. Behunin, vice president  for commercialization and regional development at Utah State  University.

According to a DOE news release announcing the awards, the 19  total projects funded by ARPA-E “leverage the nation’s brightest scientists,  engineers and entrepreneurs to develop breakthrough energy storage technologies  and support promising small businesses.”

USU is the lead research  organization on the project, and has partnered with the National Renewable  Energy Laboratory in Colorado, the University of Colorado – Colorado Springs and  Boulder campuses, and the Ford Motor Company. Ultimately, researchers will  demonstrate their approach on a full-scale commercial Ford PHEV battery  pack.


For more information about the award, visit http://arpa-e.energy.gov/media/news/tabid/83/vw/1/itemid/59/%2443-million-for-transformational-storage-projects-to-advance-electric-vehicle-and-grid-technologies.aspx