Technological Lock-In: Difference between revisions

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=External Links=
=External Links=
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PL32ea0MqM A Video by the Youtube Channel "Real Engineering" on a company developing a "Liquid Metal Battery" that spends a large ammount of time explaining the issue of technological lock-in]
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PL32ea0MqM A Video by the Youtube Channel "Real Engineering" on a company developing a "Liquid Metal Battery" that spends a large ammount of time explaining the issue of technological lock-in]
*[http://energy.mit.edu/publication/energy-storage-for-the-grid/ A MIT Energy Initiative Article Summarizing this Issue]

Revision as of 20:44, 31 December 2020

Basics

  • A characteristic pattern in the history of technology in which one “dominant design” drives out alternatives that would perform the same function.
  • To a certain extent is beneficial as it controls Project Creep in development of solutions
  • On a broader extent however, it makes the "Dominant Design" often the only profitable solution, due to economies of scale, despite sometimes being less efficient / optimal
  • An example is the usage of lithium ion batteries for stationary power storage
    • They are optimized to be lightweight and energy dense
    • The lightweight advantage doesn't matter in stationary situations, thus the main advantage is lost
    • Due to mass production for mobile electronics, they are cheaper that alternatives, despite many issues such as, Thermal Runaway , not scaling well, hazards in production/decomissioning, and raw material supply
  • The solution seems to be finding a niche, then expanding from there
    • For instance lithium ion batteries started out specifically for handheld electronics, far before being viable for BEVs
  • Also research grantes/government insentives play a major role

Internal Links

External Links