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Power Transportation

Tesla Battery Researcher Unveils New Cell That Could Last 1 Million Miles (electrek.co) 152

Long-time Slashdot reader ClarkMills writes: Not just anybody but [lithium-ion battery pioneer] Jeff Dahn [et al.] released a paper detailing cells that "should be able to power an electric vehicle for over 1.6 million kilometers (1 million miles) and last at least two decades in grid energy storage."
The new lithium-ion battery cell has a next-generation "single crystal" NMC cathode and a new advanced electrolyte, according to the site Electrotek. "We are talking about battery cells that last two to three times longer than Tesla's current battery cells."
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Tesla Battery Researcher Unveils New Cell That Could Last 1 Million Miles

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  • If this is real this is bad news for tesla shorters.
  • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @01:45PM (#59171748) Journal

    Battery tech is not my forte... why do you make me read through the whole paper to find out:

    - Ah per weight (and compared to current tech)
    - Still a fire hazard I guess?
    - Cost?

    I mean what good does it do itf this thing lasts a million years if you need three tons of them to power a go-kart? What good are they if you need just one cell to drive around earth three times, but the thing costs a trillion dollars to make?

    Seriously, how does this thing compare to what we have other than mileage?

    • Well, it lessens total cost of ownership if the battery lifetime is now 18+ years rather than 10. And since the battery is the most expensive component on an EV, that means the service lifetime of the vehicle is extended greatly.

      This isn't exactly hard to seduce.

      • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:10PM (#59171806) Journal

        Stupid Android 10 keyboard turned 'deduce' into 'seduce'...

        • Yeah, but somehow seduce sounds so much better :D

          • Well, it lessens total cost of ownership if the battery lifetime is now 18+ years rather than 10. And since the battery is the most expensive component on an EV, that means the service lifetime of the vehicle is extended greatly.
            This isn't exactly hard to seduce.

            Stupid Android 10 keyboard turned 'deduce' into 'seduce'...

            Yeah, but somehow seduce sounds so much better :D

            There is nothing stranger than the private perversions of Slashdot geeks.

        • Today's lesson: don't write detectives and romance novels on the same device.

      • I don't know anyone that got 10 years out of EV battery system, the five to eight years of a warranty is probably more like what could be expected without serious degradation. If it becomes about the same price and replacement becomes non-issue for original owner plus the next used car owner ... that would be great thing and greatly up the acceptance rate of EV.

        • Its not like there are many EV out there that even had a chance to be 10 years old. IIRC I read somewhere that no model S yet are out of warranty. You cant compare the expected lifetime of a tesla with a climate controlled battery to a leaf with no climate control. The whole way the battery is built is fundamentally different.
      • Well, it lessens total cost of ownership if the battery lifetime is now 18+ years rather than 10.

        That would only be true if all other factors remain unchanged, or change very little. A battery that can handle twice as many charge/discharge cycles but costs four times as much to put in the car might not be all that attractive. The cost of the battery is a large potion of the initial vehicle cost, as you point out. Telling people this will save them money in 10 years might not be all that helpful in making the sale. It will likely increase the resale value, which means a more immediate payback time,

    • by ras ( 84108 )

      Battery tech is not my forte... why do you make me read through the whole paper to find out:

      If you do read the paper, you will find out these isn't a new chemistry:

      In this paper, testing results on LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2/articial-graphite (NMC532/AG) cells are presented. The NMC532 used in these cells is “single crystal” NMC532 as described in the papers byJing Li et al.

      So the summary is just plain wrong. The paper is not about some new cell. It's about verifying the results of earlier papers on

    • Seriously, how does this thing compare to what we have other than mileage?
      It is the same. Which should be obvious.

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:14PM (#59171820)
    Given how much smartphone manufacturers today rely on proprietary, built-in batteries degrading to push customers to buy new smartphones every 2 years or so, you can be sure that none of them will utilized batteries that promise to work for 20 years.
    • Given how much smartphone manufacturers today rely on proprietary, built-in batteries degrading to push customers to buy new smartphones every 2 years or so, you can be sure that none of them will utilized batteries that promise to work for 20 years.

      Good thing then that they are marketing this for electric cars and not cell phones.

      Are cell phones the only kind of handheld sized technology that could use more durable batteries? I don't think so. I bought a new handheld ham radio recently because a new radio, that came with a new lithium ion battery, was cheaper than trying to get a new battery for my old handheld ham radio that used a Ni-Cd pack. The old radio still works fine, but without a working battery it is near worthless. I also have a set of

  • Open Access (Score:5, Informative)

    by guerby ( 49204 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:30PM (#59171860) Homepage

    Two things missed by the electrek piece:

    - The article is CC-BY and downloable without scribd horrible UI:
      http://jes.ecsdl.org/content/1... [ecsdl.org]
        PDF direct http://jes.ecsdl.org/content/1... [ecsdl.org]
        HTML direct http://jes.ecsdl.org/content/1... [ecsdl.org]

    - In the conclusion the authors mention:
    Full details of these cells including electrode compositions, electrode loadings, electrolyte compositions, additives used, etc. have been provided in contrast to literature reports using commercial cells. This has been done so that others can re-create these cells and use them as benchmarks for their own R+D efforts be they in the spaces of Li-ion cells or “beyond Li-ion cells”.

    So it's science as it should be!

    • Perhaps as it could and should be now. We will simply be able to buy a chassis, with wheels, motors, battery, shocks, etc. and then separately, a body that contains the interface, seats, latest stylings that plunks down on top of it. Get a new body every few years or lease one and own the chassis for its 20 year lifespan. Now that is an efficient and better model.

  • by DanDD ( 1857066 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:30PM (#59171862)

    This advancement isn't going to add much range or save much weight, but it will allow an electric vehicle to operate much longer before replacing the batteries - the single most expensive component in an electric vehicle.

    The big disruption that electric vehicles bring to the market is a change in planned obsolescence. You don't see many 20 year old vehicles being used as daily drivers because they've been designed to be discarded - not repaired and operated indefinitely. Electric cars have such a drastically reduced parts count and use higher reliability components which may allow them to be repaired and operated much longer than gas burners.

    Tesla cars are a direct attack on planned obsolescence, just as much as they are an attack on burning fossil fuels. The problem for Tesla is that once they have a certain percentage of the market share their sales will significantly decrease because their cars will last so long. One way for them to combat this is to own a nation-wide super charging network that will only charge cars that are covered by an active warranty. I suspect that Tesla will happily sell extended warranties indefinitely, which will probably also require an inspection and replacement of certain components - like below-spec or older and riskier batteries. It's been a while since I've watched any "Rich Rebuilds" Youtube videos, but I recall him having some crazy issues in trying to utilize superchargers on cars that he's resurrected, which is probably just a bit of foreshadowing.
     

    • by sphealey ( 2855 )

      I don't disagree with your overall point, but there are plenty of 1999 vehicles on the road as daily drivers today, even in areas where road salt is still used in the winter (historically the toughest test). The turning point in long-term automobile reliability came with the designs introduced in 1993-1996.

      The viability of the auto dealership model depending on service revenue is another serious challenge for the industry.

      • The turning point in long-term automobile reliability came with the designs introduced in 1993-1996.

        IMO it's the corrosion protection methods adopted in the eighties. Cars of the 70s tended to rust out easy AF. You can fix anything but rust is the biggest PITA.

      • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

        The 'Cash for Clunkers' really thinned the old car herd. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • The problem for Tesla is that once they have a certain percentage of the market share their sales will significantly decrease because their cars will last so long.

      For people to discover a Tesla car lasts decades will take decades, because.... well just because. This realization will come on slowly and therefore give plenty of time for Tesla, and the automotive industry as a whole, to adjust.

      This will not happen for a very long time. Everyone will see this coming. There will be competition arising for longer lasting vehicles. There is still plenty of growth in the market for privately owned automobiles in the world. Thinking that Tesla will become it's own worst

      • Very few people wait till the car stop working to replace their cars. Most do because damage to the exterior from sun//weather/bird-droppings/salt and interior from sun/wear-and-tear. The exterior/interior of the car on an electric will age the same as on a internal-combustion. and they will be discarded despite the components that make it go being in acceptable working order
    • you clearly know nothing about cars. Firstly, there are plenty of 90s-00s cars on the road in the west. There is no rust to kill them. Second, the reason people get new cars isn't because their current one breaks. It is because the constant barrage of auto advertising convinces them for some vague reasons, that they need a new one. This feeling eats away at the person until they trade in their 5 year old car for a Brand New Car. Thus rolling their debt over and making profit for the auto companies.

      Then the

    • I think it will add about 20% range as these cells can be run to 100% DOD... something you just don't do with current cells due to degradation...

    • That's not planned obsolescence, that's mechanical parts behaving according to the laws of nature. Moving parts inevitably deteriorate over time because friction induces wear.

      Planned obsolescence would be to engineer parts to break after the warranty period (which does not happen, cars last 20+ years, not the 3-6 of their warranty period), or to not make replacement parts available (parts get rare and more expensive for really old cars, but this is never a problem for just-out-of-warranty cars).

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      This is too optimistic.

      Tesla cars are designed as software first with some car hardware attached to it. If longevity ever become a problem for Tesla, they will just roll out an over-the-air patch. Just like Apple where they degraded performance of old phones.
  • All of the automakers, all of the drug companies, all technology companies, heck all restaurants with a creative chef have technology in their development group that could revolutionize their market or even the world. 98% of that technology, at least, turns out not to be practically usable in the real world. Tesla is building great electric cars and has pushed the rest of the world to advance the engineering and incremental improvements without a doubt, but Telsa/Musk's record on revelations of world-shatt

  • Worthless (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rbrander ( 73222 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:10PM (#59171938) Homepage

    ...to me, at least. Our car just cracked 100,000 km, after 17 years.

    Yes, many customers will be thrilled and some made possible that were not possible before; but for a lot of us, there's no added value.

    It's very possible that the future will have a whole new paradigm, where your choice of a car won't just be about whether you want a subcompact, an SUV, a truck -- but whether you want the battery system that recharges faster, holds more range, or has a longer commercial life. The three may have tradeoffs so large that different products will be sold.

    • 100k in 17 years? That works out to roughly 5,900 miles per year or 16 miles per day.

      Imagine, in that time you would have only had to replace two sets of tires, no gas, no oil changes, etc.

      Minimal infrastructure costs as you wouldn't need a special charger, just with that low amount of driving per day, you could just run an extension cord to keep it charged.

      • Those are km - not miles. It works out to ~10 miles per day. This is typical for someone who can walk / bike to work. It amounts to weekend driving, the occasional "I am running late" days, and possibly a summer trip or two. But it would be hard to fit kids into that budget unless you lived across from a school.

        But how much would you save with electric? Nothing... At these distances and with the reliability of modern petrol engines - gas is still the much cheaper option. Things will change if elec

        • But it would be hard to fit kids into that budget unless you lived across from a school.
          In most countries kids go to school with bikes, by bus or walk.
          It is extremely uncommon that kids get brought by the parents in a car. Picked up perhaps, but that is also not that common as many schools are not whole day schools and kids et home before the parents.

    • ...to me, at least. Our car just cracked 100,000 km, after 17 years.

      And if your car had full self driving ability, such that you could have it act as a taxi when you were not using it?

      That could put a lot of miles on very quickly.

      Tesla mentioned the car being able to last a million miles when they talked about the self driving ability.

      • And if your car had full self driving ability, such that you could have it act as a taxi when you were not using it?
        I guess the amount of people who are (would be) willing to do that is extremely small. I would give my car to my best friend if he needs it, but not random guys via an app as a taxi, no way in freezing hell.

  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:27PM (#59171978)

    "We are talking about battery cells that last two to three times longer than Tesla's current battery cells."

    Bring it -- don't sing it. I'll add you to the list of other battery breakthroughs due to arrive in a few years (list age: 20 years).

  • I haven't worked in 20 years and shouldn't need to work for 20 more.

    I just get paid a dollar, every time a new amazing battery tech article is put out. I don't know what to do with all the money. (well, except keep replacing my batteries unfortunately, these things never seem to last)

  • by UID30 ( 176734 )
    New batteries are Li-Ion based with new electrolyte and modified cathode design. While potentially lasting longer, they will still have the same "explodey" problem today's Li-Ion batteries have. Still waiting for solid state batteries before I'm willing to move into the EV world.
    • Re:TLDR (Score:5, Insightful)

      by n3r0.m4dski11z ( 447312 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @09:30PM (#59172630) Homepage Journal

      " they will still have the same "explodey" problem today's Li-Ion batteries have. Still waiting for solid state batteries before I'm willing to move into the EV world."

      Your fear of lithium ion battery explosion is keeping you strapped into a metal box that is harnessing thousands of explosions per minute and carrying between 30-80L of highly flammable liquid in a 2.7mm thick container, sitting maybe a foot from the roadway, racing by at 100km/h, and which could be covered in any sort of shrapnel that some idiot tried to tie down with twine to the roof of their civic.

      Makes perfect sense to me!

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