Advanced Cell Fabrication and Materials Development
Battery and Systems:
Product Validation, Testing
and Certification
Training and Advisory Support:
Next Generation Outreach and Education Courses
Technology Development and
Start-Up Incubation
Collaborate and Convene:
Innovation Through to Commercialization

The Battery Innovation Center

Our mission is focused on promoting the rapid development, testing, commercialization, and advanced learning of safe, reliable, high-performance, and lightweight energy storage systems for our commercial, defense, academic partners and industry.

Battery Manufacturing

Assisting with the development of manufacturing processes and capabilities, to fast track to full-scale manufacturing.

Testing, Evaluation, and Certification

Providing a large array of testing capabilities, which include battery cells through to full-scale large-format battery systems.

Technical Consultation and Training

The BIC provides in-depth experience, a vast network of experties, industry training and advancement learning.

The Energy Storage Short Course

Educational Series

Recent News

Electric Vehicle Product Commission_Executive Summary
Business

Indiana Electric Vehicle Products Commission Annual Report

The Indiana Electric Vehicle Products Commission’s first report on Indiana’s EV products landscape puts our Hoosier state at the front of the pack for engaging industry.

The Automotive Industry initiated the beginning of a technical revolution in Indiana by cultivating research and pioneering products over the course of many decades. Although the local
automotive industry boom has grown immensely recently, Hoosier leaders have been developing the culture of innovation tediously with substantial attention to detail and rising trends.

Business

Marine News – Batteries: Ready to Scale Up

In an interview Wrightsman commented that maritime
battery applications, indeed, have reached an off-the-shelf
status, but he still characterized the U.S. market as “pilot
scale”, at least compared to European and Asian markets.
Wrightsman said that the battery supply chain presents
challenges. Lithium costs have increased, and future demand
will add pricing pressures. Raw materials are available
today, but he expects supply risks by 2030. “If you
don’t change anything,” he noted, with particular reference
to the U.S. regulatory process, “we run risks of shortages.
We need domestic production.”

What some of our Clients are saying

Our extensive expertise will make sure that your project is a SUCCESS STORY!

Skip to content