Is the EEStor Saga Finished?

No news, no website, no chatter from the ultracapacitor urban legend except for some government skepticism.

EEStor is the urban legend of a startup that is said to be building a supercapacitor material that would store more energy and charge and discharge faster than previous materials by a factor of ten.  If true, it could change the technology of electric vehicle charging and utility-scale energy storage. 

We've made repeated attempts to contact the company and its CEO, Dick Weir, to no avail.  Here is some of our EEStor coverage from last year, which includes a musical lament. The firm's website is no longer online and the usual fevered musings of the EEStor blogosphere have slowed. 

Here's an abbreviated timeline of the firm's financial and partnership activity:

A source sent me some documents from an FOIA request from the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) at Kirtland. They seem to indicate that the AFRL is puzzled over EEStor's story and unwilling to be associated with the firm. The redacted documents follow. Note the comment that EEStor is "full of it."

 

 

We report extensively on energy storage companies at Greentech Media.  Here's a recent overview.