For decades, silicon batteries were a pipe dream. The product, a cross between a standard lithium battery and a form of silicon, has long been a goal for electrical engineers and materials scientists, but various issues, including physical stability, held the technology back.
Now, silicon battery company Group 14 is shipping millions of working batteries, a move that could change the face of both civilian and military EVs and mobile devices.
I sat down with Rick Luebbe, CEO of Group 14 Technologies, a company commercializing silicon anode material that replaces graphite in traditional lithium-ion batteries.
“Here at Group 14, we are commercializing silicon battery technology,” Luebbe told me. “We make a silicon carbon composite that replaces graphite in a traditional lithium-ion battery, turning it into a silicon battery, delivering significantly higher energy. And what’s especially exciting is extremely fast charging.”
A silicon battery is a lithium-ion battery that replaces the traditional graphite anode with silicon. When charging, lithium ions move into the anode. In graphite, they slip between carbon layers, which limits how much lithium can be stored. In silicon, they form an alloy with the silicon atoms, allowing far more lithium to be packed into the same space, which increases energy density. The main challenge is that silicon expands dramatically as it absorbs lithium and contracts when it releases it, which can damage the battery over time. In fact, Luebbe noted that older batteries only had a few dozen charge cycles. Modern designs solve this by embedding silicon in a carbon scaffold that stabilizes the material, enabling higher capacity, faster charging, and strong cycle life. Luebbe said that his batteries now offer thousands of cycles.
“We’ve invented this composite with carbon that effectively stabilizes the silicon in a carbon scaffold and allows it to expand and contract without really affecting the rest of the cell,” Luebbe said. “And so we get thousands of cycles, as good, if not better in many cases than traditional graphite.”
“One silicon atom can hold four lithium atoms,” he said. “You get a 10 to 1 improvement in capacity using silicon over graphite, and that’s really what lends to this much higher energy density.”
In practical terms, that means up to 50 percent more energy in the same battery footprint. For EVs, that translates directly into more range. For consumer electronics, it means thinner devices or longer life.
But the more disruptive claim is charging speed.
“We’ve got customers today demonstrating batteries they claim can be charged from 0 to 100 percent in 90 seconds,” Luebbe said. “It’s almost flash charging.”
Ninety seconds sounds like hype until you understand what it does to infrastructure. Faster charge and discharge rates also matter for high-power applications. Luebbe noted that drone takeoff needs a massive battery discharge along with AI servers, which need surges of power to perform difficult calculations. Both of these technologies can be improved with silicon.
“The silicon batteries can respond fast enough and provide that peak shifting required to allow you to not have excess power connected to all your servers,” Luebbe explained.
Then there is the supply chain angle. About 90 percent of battery-grade graphite is processed in China. That creates both economic and security risks. Silicon anodes make it easy for the U.S. and Europe to build their own batteries at scale.
“One ton of our material displaces five tons of Chinese graphite,” Luebbe said. “There’s a really interesting supply chain security play here as well.”
Group 14 is scaling manufacturing in Korea, Washington State, and Germany. Right now, they are building factories where cars are being built. The company has already raised significant capital and is in roughly 20 million mobile phones. The next wave is EVs, aviation, defense, and data infrastructure.
Energy storage has always been a quiet constraint on modern life. Group 14 is betting that silicon removes that constraint. If they are right, the next decade of electrification looks very different from the last.
“When you think about this kind of transformational capability to charge and discharge so quickly, I think it’s going to change the way we do a lot of things with the electrification of everything,” he said.










