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This week on Cambridge Tech Podcast, we sit down with David Fyfe and Kamil Sokolowski from Kodiaq Technologies for a conversation that left us excited about the future of energy storage.
Key insights
Metal-Free, Organic Electrolytes: Kodiaq is developing next-gen organic electrolytes for flow batteries, avoiding the supply chain risks and costs tied to traditional metals like vanadium.
Enhanced Energy Density: They had already demonstrated that the energy their electrolyte could absorb was twice that of existing vanadium technology.
Drop-In Replacement: Their solution can potentially retrofit existing vanadium battery systems, instantly increasing capacity without a total system overhaul.
Resilience & Simplicity: Unlike current technologies that need strict air-free conditions, Kodiaq’s electrolyte is “oxygen-tolerant” -making construction, operation, and maintenance more flexible and less expensive.
Sustainability & Sovereignty: Kamil notes, "Developing this chemistry removes the dependence on the mining sector. These electrolytes can be produced anywhere and recycled for a second life."
Licensing-Led Approach: Inspired by models like ARM, Kodiaq plans to supply the chemistry and intellectual property, leaving battery manufacturing and integration to partners.
Global Impact, Local Roots: With worldwide ambitions, they’re actively building collaborations - especially seeking corporate partners ready to pilot their tech.
As renewables explode worldwide, storing energy safely, efficiently, and scalably is the central challenge of our net-zero future. Kodiaq could be the company to crack this problem - right from Cambridge’s legendary cluster.
Produced by Cambridge TV
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By James Parton & Faye HollandThis week on Cambridge Tech Podcast, we sit down with David Fyfe and Kamil Sokolowski from Kodiaq Technologies for a conversation that left us excited about the future of energy storage.
Key insights
Metal-Free, Organic Electrolytes: Kodiaq is developing next-gen organic electrolytes for flow batteries, avoiding the supply chain risks and costs tied to traditional metals like vanadium.
Enhanced Energy Density: They had already demonstrated that the energy their electrolyte could absorb was twice that of existing vanadium technology.
Drop-In Replacement: Their solution can potentially retrofit existing vanadium battery systems, instantly increasing capacity without a total system overhaul.
Resilience & Simplicity: Unlike current technologies that need strict air-free conditions, Kodiaq’s electrolyte is “oxygen-tolerant” -making construction, operation, and maintenance more flexible and less expensive.
Sustainability & Sovereignty: Kamil notes, "Developing this chemistry removes the dependence on the mining sector. These electrolytes can be produced anywhere and recycled for a second life."
Licensing-Led Approach: Inspired by models like ARM, Kodiaq plans to supply the chemistry and intellectual property, leaving battery manufacturing and integration to partners.
Global Impact, Local Roots: With worldwide ambitions, they’re actively building collaborations - especially seeking corporate partners ready to pilot their tech.
As renewables explode worldwide, storing energy safely, efficiently, and scalably is the central challenge of our net-zero future. Kodiaq could be the company to crack this problem - right from Cambridge’s legendary cluster.
Produced by Cambridge TV
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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