In an industry where Asian battery manufacturers have historically been the world leaders, the traditional way to mix battery slurry involves all the elements being mixed in large vats. Slurry processing times are lengthy, and labor-intensive cleaning is needed of each vat after a mix has been completed. Samples are taken to a laboratory for analysis with the potential for batch wastage if there is found to be a quality issue. Ten years ago, Bühler came up with the idea of using twin-screw mixers to create a continuous mixing process. It cut operation time and produced higher consistency, better quality, and less wastage. By leveraging its knowledge about continuous production of high-tech, non-food products and applying technologies used in other business areas, Bühler had created a radical alternative to the traditional batch-mixing method.
“The beauty of this process is that it is continuous, so all the raw materials go in at different points and after just one or two minutes the final slurry is discharged,” explains Stössel. “One of the huge benefits of this continuous process is the ability to automate it and have it running 24 hours a day with no need to interrupt production for the cleaning of equipment.” Bühler then launched QuaLiB, a quality control expert system that provides real-time digital data on the automated mixing parameters and continual sampling of slurry quality. With real-time data flows of production parameters, quality can now be tightly controlled, improving the process safety, product quality, and overall yield.
Bühler is also involved in research into new technologies such as solid-state lithium-ion batteries or fully dry-processed electrode formulations, which are cheaper to produce as they do not require solvent drying in the electrode coating process. “This is a field in which we are highly active and are constantly gaining experience. The twin-screw mixer is the ideal platform to explore novel process technology,” says Stössel. There is a growing realization that in today’s megacities, where car sharing is anticipated to become more common, the desire for maximum distance on a single charge may not be the holy grail it is for other consumers. For those manufacturers who want maximum range, the weight of the car is also an important factor. Here again, Bühler is playing a key role in supporting change in the way cars are constructed. In the summer of 2019, Elon Musk announced his company would make larger car components rather than continuing the traditional method of producing multiple steel stamping parts and relying on robots to weld the parts together. It was the start of a trend in the automotive industry that led to ever-larger Carat die-casting machines.
The largest Carat die-casting machines are as big as a house, at 8 meters high, and stand on a floor space of nearly 100 square meters. “The Carat 920 is able to inject over 200 kilograms of liquid aluminum into a die within milliseconds, thereby holding the die tight by applying to it a force of 92,000 kN. Imagine locking the die with the weight of the Eiffel tower – that’s 9,000 tons every single shot,” explains Michael Cinelli, Product Manager Die Casting at Bühler.