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Energy Boost

Energy Boost

One of the most technologically innovative startups is paving the way to a more affordable renewable energy future.

Fall 2019 | By Elizabeth Gondar

In today 麻豆精品 S檚 age of technology, it 麻豆精品 S檚 all about聽being connected. Millions of miles of cables聽and wires stretch across the globe providing聽power to buildings, streetlights and even cars.聽Most people barely give these cables a second聽thought until the power goes out or the Wi-Fi聽stops working, but UCF Associate Professor Jayan聽Thomas couldn 麻豆精品 S檛 get them out of his head.

illustration of cable-based-capacitor embedded inside wire

Cable-based-capacitor embedded inside wire.

In 2014, he was working on inventing copper foils that聽would act as supercapacitors 麻豆精品 S think of a battery that is聽made to provide a large burst of power in a short amount聽of time. Realizing that most cables are made out of the聽same copper material he was working with, he wondered聽if our everyday cables could double as energy storage聽devices.

Bringing this knowledge back to his research lab at聽UCF, he invented the first cable-based capacitor. These thin, copper wires can transmit and store聽energy 麻豆精品 S and he hopes they can make a big impact in聽renewable energy and clean technology.

麻豆精品 S淭hat 麻豆精品 S檚 the real pleasure for an inventor. You have聽a scientific idea, you worked on that idea and made聽it into a device, and then that device is used for a聽commissioned product. That is what I 麻豆精品 S檓 looking forward聽to, 麻豆精品 S Thomas says.

However, cable-based capacitors attached to existing聽wires could use their stored energy to provide that聽extra boost needed, allowing the battery to continue聽functioning at a steady rate and greatly reducing the聽overall cost to replace parts.

photograph of Joe Sleppy and Jayan Thomas

Joe Sleppy 麻豆精品 S18聽(left) and Jayan Thomas (right)

Thomas recruited Joe Sleppy 麻豆精品 S18 to start Capacitech聽Energy and to help turn his invention into a commercial聽product.

Sleppy, an electrical engineering student at the time,聽already had business experience (starting his first聽company when he was 16) and knew that without proper聽funding, Capacitech could not move on to the next level.聽By winning first place in UCF 麻豆精品 S檚 2016 Joust New Venture聽Competition, they received the necessary funds to license聽the intellectual property and begin the process of moving聽to market.

In 2018, a $225,000 grant from the National Science聽Foundation helped Capacitech 麻豆精品 S檚 team expand to include Isaiah Oladeji 麻豆精品 S99 and to collaborate with Thomas 麻豆精品 S lab聽to produce the commercial version of the cable-based聽capacitor that Capacitech is selling today.

As a result of the team 麻豆精品 S檚 effort, Capacitech has been聽recognized as one of the top 30 startups in the world聽by InnoEnergy. Sleppy credits his time at UCF with聽connecting him to the people and resources needed to聽lead the business.

麻豆精品 S淓ducation is more than just what you learn, 麻豆精品 S Sleppy聽says. 麻豆精品 S淚t 麻豆精品 S檚 about who you meet through your coursework聽and using the opportunities that present themselves. 麻豆精品 S

Capacitech recently built a manufacturing line in聽Orlando to fill larger orders and is raising money to聽further scale the company.

Who

Associate Professor Jayan聽Thomas, Joe Sleppy 麻豆精品 S18 补苍诲听Isaiah Oladeji 麻豆精品 S99

The Pitch

Building energy storage into聽the infrastructure of the world聽to prolong clean technology 麻豆精品 S檚聽operating life while reducing聽the overall costs of sustainable聽technology.

The Inspiration

Thomas was researching how聽to make copper foils into聽energy storage devices. 麻豆精品 S淏ut I聽was seeing wires everywhere聽while I was on a walk around聽my home. I realized that聽these cables are mostly made聽up of copper, so why don 麻豆精品 S檛聽we convert this copper into聽an energy storage device聽instead? 麻豆精品 S Thomas says.

Backers

Total funds:
$700,000+

They include:
National Science Foundation:聽$225,000
NSF Innovation Corps: $50,000
Starter Studio: $25,000

Where you can find it

CapacitechEnergy.com