Talks and shows

How AI is Reinventing the Battery

Join the Faraday Institution, and a panel of leading scientists and engineers, for a series of talks exploring how AI could lead to a battery revolution

Discovery Alert

Batteries are the heartbeat of the modern world. But the race to build a device that charges faster, lasts longer, and costs less has traditionally been a slow game of chemical trial and error.

It’s time to change the rules.

Join the Faraday Institution for an electrifying evening where artificial intelligence meets electrochemistry. Guided by chair James Le Houx we will journey from:

The atomic scale with Aron Walsh, showing how AI acts as a digital alchemist, simulating billions of crystals to discover new materials before they even exist in the lab; 
To the microscale with Sam Cooper, demonstrating how machine learning optimises the manufacturing recipe to bake the perfect internal structure; 
To system scale with Mona Faraji Niri, showing how smart algorithms act as a forensic investigator, analysing complex data streams to uncover hidden internal faults and predict battery lifespans with unprecedented accuracy.

Join our panel of experts who will reveal how AI is accelerating the development of batteries of the future. 

Event type

This is a theatre and livestream event for an adult audience, where the speakers and audience in our Theatre are joined by our audience online. 

By booking to attend events at the Royal Institution, you confirm that you have read and accept the Ri's event terms and conditions. You also agree to abide by our code of conduct, and help to create a great experience for yourself and your fellow participants. Please note that Eventbrite adds a small booking fee to the amount paid for each ticket option.

For any queries regarding this event please get in touch by phone 020 7409 2992 or email events@ri.ac.uk.

This is an event at the Ri. 

About the Speakers

James Le Houx is a Senior Lecturer in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Greenwich and an Emerging Leader Fellow at the Faraday Institution and the Science and Technology Facilities Council. He leads the BASE Laboratory (Beamlines for Autonomous Science and Engineering), where his team develops AI-driven autonomous systems for synchrotron X-ray experiments. His research focuses on using advanced imaging to understand how batteries work and fail.

Aron Walsh is Chief Scientific Officer at CuspAI, and Professor of Materials Design at Imperial College London. His research spans computational materials science, with expertise in electronic structure theory and machine learning for materials discovery. He was awarded the EU-40 Prize for his work on the theory of next-generation solar cells, and the RSC Corday-Morgan Prize for contributions to computational chemistry.

Sam Cooper is an Associate Professor in AI for Materials Design at Imperial College London and leader of the Tools for Learning, Design, and Research (TLDR) group. His work focuses on the design of next generation energy storage technologies, as well as exploring the development of machine learning methods in this space.  

Mona Faraji Niri is an Associate Professor of Battery Modelling at WMG, University of Warwick. She is a co-investigator and research fellow of the Faraday Institution and a Fellow of the Alan Turing Institution in Artificial Intelligence and Data. Mona is specialised in modelling, control algorithms and artificial intelligence for dynamical systems and has extensive experience in energy storage systems, Li-ion batteries, battery management, as well as electric vehicle powertrains. 

Timing

Doors to the theatre will open at 6.45pm and the talk will begin at 7.00pm.

Timing for the livestream

The livestream will go live at 6.55pm and the introduction will begin at 7.00pm. If you register but miss the livestream, the video will be available to you via the same link for two weeks after the event date.

Accessibility

The event will take place on the first floor and there is step-free access from the street via lift.

The closest underground station is Green Park, which is step-free.

There is space at floor level in the theatre for wheelchair users.

Seating is usually unreserved for our events. If you and your group require seating reservations, please do let us know by emailing us at events@ri.ac.uk, and we’ll be more than happy to help.

Carers can receive a free ticket to an event by emailing events@ri.ac.uk.

Our theatre is equipped with an Audio Induction Loop. 

Event terms and conditions

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