Elon Musk made a lot of promises during Tesla’s Battery Day last September. Soon, he said, the company would have a car that runs on batteries with pure silicon anodes to boost their performance and reduced cobalt in the cathodes to  lower their price. Its battery pack will be integrated into the chassis  so that it provides mechanical support in addition to energy, a design  that Musk claimed will reduce the car’s weight by 10 percent and improve  its mileage by even more. He hailed Tesla’s structural battery as a  “revolution” in engineering—but for some battery researchers, Musk’s  future looked a lot like the past.
 “He’s essentially doing something that we did 10 years ago,” says  Emile Greenhalgh, a materials scientist at Imperial College London and  the engineering chair in emerging technologies at the Royal Academy.  He’s one of the world’s leading experts on structural batteries, an  approach to energy storage that erases the boundary between the battery  and the object it powers. “What we’re doing is going beyond what Elon  Musk has been talking about,” Greenhalgh says. “There are no embedded  batteries. The material itself is the energy storage device.”
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