Tech Pioneers Who Will Change Your Life
Meet some of the World Economic Forum's Technology Pioneers and the innovations they are bringing to market
In early 2005, after quitting her job in a technology consulting firm, Christina Lampe-Onnerud founded Boston-Power. She then headed to China, ponying up her own money to test-run designs of a more muscular lithium-ion battery that could sustain 1,000 charge-and-discharge cycles (vs. the standard few hundred) with no loss of cell capacity over time. A couple of months later, she had a viable product "the next-generation lithium-ion battery," says CEO Lampe-Onnerud and shortly after HP as a partner. A second Boston-Power lithium-ion battery, primarily used in electric vehicles, is also making headway. "The portable-electronics industry has recognized this technology as a disruptive innovation," she says. There's a good reason companies are eager to get into the high-efficiency lithium-ion-cell business, says Rob Enderle, a technology analyst at the Enderle Group. "Within three to five years, when the price comes down, I expect this new lithium-ion-battery technology will be the industry standard."
Coeli Carr
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