Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Arcturus could halve the grid’s electrical losses using its nano-infused metals

read original more articles
Why This Matters

Arcturus's innovative nano-infused metals have the potential to significantly improve electrical grid efficiency by halving energy losses, addressing the increasing demand for copper and aluminum driven by the energy transition and digital infrastructure. This advancement could lead to more reliable, higher-capacity power systems without the need for additional metal resources, benefiting both the tech industry and consumers. The technology's initial applications in data centers and robotics highlight its broad potential impact on energy efficiency and sustainability.

Key Takeaways

The world uses a lot of copper, but thanks to the energy transition and data centers, it’ll need a lot more. Between now and 2050, we’ll have to produce more copper than has been mined throughout all of human history, according to one study.

Plenty of that copper — and even more aluminum — ends up in the electrical grid, which in the U.S. is showing its age.

“We’re hitting this inflection point of AI and the electrification of nearly every industry, and it’s creating this point where we have overburdened and overstressed the energy grid,” Amir Mashal, founder and CEO of Arcturus, told TechCrunch.

One option is to throw more metal at the problem, but Mashal said his startup, which has been operating in stealth, offers an alternative. Arcturus can reduce the amount of energy that electrical conductors lose to heat by infusing carbon nanomaterials into copper and aluminum using lasers. Replacing traditional metal with Arcturus’s material would allow the same size power lines to carry more electricity.

In practical terms, that could cut losses on the electrical grid in half, which would immediately unlock around 3% more electricity on average and up to 10% more during the most congested times, when the grid arguably needs it most. At the low end, that’s about a year’s worth of demand growth in the U.S.

“Copper loses conductivity as it heats up, so the hotter it gets, the more energy it wastes as heat,” Mashal said. “As I kept peeling back the layers of that onion, everything kind of started clicking to me because I noticed the same limit shows up everywhere. The modern world really runs on metals.”

While the grid is the ultimate destination for a materials startup like Arcturus, the company is starting smaller with drones, robotics, and, yes, data centers, where a few percentage points more electricity can have an outsized impact.

The company exclusively told TechCrunch that it raised $8 million in a seed round led by Initialized Capital with participation from Toyota Ventures, Breakthrough Energy Discovery, 1517, and Wireframe Ventures.

Mashal has been quietly refining his materials in a garage in Malibu, California, where he’s currently able to produce several centimeters of wire as a proof of concept. With the new funding, he plans to ramp up to tens of meters so that the nano-infused materials can be tested in various applications, including windings in electric motors and busbars in power distribution equipment.

Though the materials’ properties are new, Mashal said they’re engineered to be a “drop-in replacement” in existing copper and aluminum applications. “Same form factors, no system redesign, no new training for folks to handle or crimp the material.”

... continue reading