Cerebral Energy awarded Phase II SBIR by Space Development Agency (SDA) for solid state graphene-based batteries

Cerebral Energy, a company that develops next-gen energy systems with advanced materials derived from US waste streams for the US Department of Defense and other federal agencies, has announced it has been selected by Space Development Agency (SDA) for a Phase II SBIR follow-on contract in the amount of $2 million to support further development of a new graphene based secondary battery derived from recycled US waste streams. 

The technology was originally designed and prototyped by NASA scientists and is being commercialized by Cerebral Energy to support improved satellite power in SDA’s Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA). The novel graphene solid state battery architecture previously achieved over 500 W/h Kg energy density in lab prototypes. Cerebral’s graphene battery is over 3X more efficient than conventional lithium-ion batteries, much safer (no fire risk), up to 100X faster charging and has no supply chain challenges since the materials are derived from abundant US waste streams. Cerebral will be examining scalable additive manufacturing techniques for SDA in the Phase II project with additional support by AFWERX and AFRL.

 

"We’re honored to be working with Space Development Agency on this leap ahead technology which will support space-based demands of our joint warfighter community while greatly improving the efficiency and safety of secondary batteries used in SDA’s PWSA,” said Eric Bentsen, Co-founder and CEO of Cerebral Energy.

Posted: Sep 19,2025 by Roni Peleg