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Power Transportation

Soon Electric Vehicles Could Charge Faster Than Your iPhone (yahoo.com) 321

The Washington Post shares a little-acknowledged downside to electric cars: recharging takes "upward of 15 to 30 minutes."

But scientists are already working on improvements: In a report released this week, government researchers said they have found a way to charge electric car batteries up to 90 percent in just 10 minutes. The method is likely five years away from making its way into the market, scientists said, but would mark a fundamental shift. "The goal is to get very, very close to [times] you would see at the gas pump," said Eric Dufek, a lead author of the study and scientist at the Idaho National Laboratory, a research center run by the Department of Energy....

At issue is the delicate balance of trying to charge an electric vehicle battery quicker, but not doing it so fast that a rapid charge does long-term damage to the battery or plays a role in causing them to explode. Charging electric batteries fast can cause damage, reducing the battery's life span and performance, scientists said. "You've had batteries when you first got it, they were great, but after a couple years or a few hundred charge cycles, they don't perform as well," said Eric D. Wachsman, director of the Maryland Energy Innovation Institute, an energy research organization at the University of Maryland. To try to solve this, Dufek and his team used machine learning to figure out how batteries age when charging fast. Their algorithm was trained to analyze 20,000 to 30,000 data points which indicated how well the battery was charging and whether it was aging or degrading....

Wachsman said the new research is helpful for the field. "Not too fast, not too slow," he said of Dufek's charging approach. "It's just right in that Goldilocks [zone]." But the bigger benefit, he said, would be if this method spurs car companies to make electric vehicles with smaller batteries, since they'd now have batteries that could be charged quicker and allow consumers to feel less worried about stopping periodically to get a quick recharge.

"Smaller batteries are cheaper cars," he said.

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Soon Electric Vehicles Could Charge Faster Than Your iPhone

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  • And can be charged in less than a minute

    • It isn't that scalable since a cellphone battery cannot be divided into 6000 or more cells that charge in parallel like a car battery. (Never say Never, but they'd be awfully small cells).
      • by Entrope ( 68843 )

        A few current phones do have very parallel batteries -- they advertise charging at up to 120 W. The problem is that it's hard to balance the charging and discharging across that many cells. There are small physical differences between the cells, and the environment of each cell is slightly different, so they don't all (dis-)charge at the same rate.

  • "soon" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @08:39PM (#62831269)

    The method is likely five years away from making its way into the market

    So going by the age old battery scientist adjustment factor of 10x the stated timeframe, it should be about 50 years until we see this in the market.

    • Desten ( https://insideevs.com/news/541... [insideevs.com] ) has already proven technology like this with real world design... a 900kw charging battery that can go the distance. This, combined with other technology related last week, could be the electric car charging of the future with "charge stops" taking no longer than current petrol/diesel "fuel stops" where people go inside to use the bathrooms, get a drink / snacks, then leave to continue their road trip... time: 10minutes or so.
      >
      The biggest thing that will ho
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 28, 2022 @08:54PM (#62831299)

    Lets say we take a Tesla with a 100,000 watt-hour battery pack. Charging that up to 90% means stuffing 90,000 watts in five minutes. Normalizing that to watt-hours, we are talking tens of millions of watt-hours over a 24 hour usage time. Do we have the connectors and wiring for this? Maybe if we had room conducting superconductors and a liquid nitrogen based cooling system to handle all the heat coming from stuffing that many amps down a cable, even at relatively high voltages like 480 VDC.

    No grid in the US can take that. Maybe in Europe where gigawatt power plants are commonplace, but it is next to impossible to get megawatt-tier stuff built, much less stuff built that can handle this amount of electricity, not to mention the wiring and infrastructure needed. If a grid in the US could take that much usage, there would be bitcoin mining data centers everywhere, just because BTC is a guarenteed win as one gets paid if they mine coins, or if they don't, like in Texas.

    Sorry, but this stuff is nice fantasy, but reality does come knocking on the door. It would be nice to see PHEVs, but those are not "eco" enough for California, where their standards are just plain impossible to meet and are another tax on the poor. Most likely, CA's laws will just get struck down in a Federal court, especially if 45 becomes 47 (which is 100% guaranteed to happen if handcuffs are not clicked on wrists.)

    How about a transition to PHEVs until we get stuff actually working? A serial hybrid has all the advantages of an EV but without the range anxiety.

    • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @09:01PM (#62831311)

      even at relatively high voltages like 480 VDC.

      800V charging is going to be a standard soon. https://spectrum.ieee.org/ev-c... [ieee.org]

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @09:56PM (#62831457) Homepage

      If it's 5 minutes, you'll probably get no more than about 50% capacity factor at peak hours. So 540kW mean draw (if battery buffered for a steady draw). On what planet do you live where half-megawatt feeds are some sort of physical impossibility? The aluminum smelter half an hour from me has a 390 megawatt feed, and it doesn't require "room conducting superconductors and a liquid nitrogen based cooling system".

      Are you talking about the cables? Yes, they're liquid cooled. No, there's no point going with liquid nitrogen or anything exotic, as it won't cool that much faster than water cooling. You're talking about just over 1MW peak. The MCS (Megawatt Charging System) standard for semi trucks handles 3 1/2 megawatts, and it Exists Today.

      "No grid can handle" what? If all passenger cars went electric it'd only increase total electricity demand by ~15%. Add more for semi trucks and other vehicle types. And the overwhelming majority of that would be at night, when half the generation capacity sits idle because demand is so low.

      Most places already - ALREADY - have the generation capacity for EVERYONE to go electric - let alone by say 2030, given that building most types of power plants only takes a few years (even nuclear can be built in a decade). The main thing that's lacking is local grid upgrades in various places. But local grids upgrades happen far faster than EV production can scale up.

      there would be bitcoin mining data centers everywhere

      Bitcoin miners go where the power is cheapest. There is not infinite demand for Bitcoin mining - they're fighting for a finite pool of newly minted coins, whose value depends on the current BTC-USD exchange rate (which is currently quite low).

      • On what planet do you live where only one car at a time will be charging? Back here in the real world half MW + a fuck ton of cars means you are full of shit if you think the US grid can handle sudden demand peaks like that.
        • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

          Wouldn't that be half a MW times a fuck ton of cars? I hope this post isn't indicative of your overall math skills :D.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by MacMann ( 7518492 )

      Lets say we take a Tesla with a 100,000 watt-hour battery pack. Charging that up to 90% means stuffing 90,000 watts in five minutes. Normalizing that to watt-hours, we are talking tens of millions of watt-hours over a 24 hour usage time. Do we have the connectors and wiring for this? Maybe if we had room conducting superconductors and a liquid nitrogen based cooling system to handle all the heat coming from stuffing that many amps down a cable, even at relatively high voltages like 480 VDC.

      We do not have the wires and connectors for this. It is unlikely that we will due to things like the voltage that can be sustained in air before arcing occurs.

      We had a Slashdot article not long ago of a professor from MIT trying to sell batteries for use at car charging stations to minimize the load on the electrical grid from dumping so much power into car batteries. If we are putting batteries at EV chargers to keep from overloading the local electrical supply then that is a sign of a large infrastructu

      • BEV has already moved out of the sectors you say it will be restricted to. You are behind the times.
      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        "We do not have the wires and connectors for this. It is unlikely that we will due to things like the voltage that can be sustained in air before arcing occurs."

        That's why you don't just hot plug. Jesus, this is basic electrical operation. Even when I'm testing 1,000V LED arrays, it's always the same procedure to avoid free-air arcing - don't apply power until the contacts have actually been connected.

  • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @09:17PM (#62831355)

    Not sure how they can call it that. Pretty much every EV-non-buyer cites that as one of the primary reasons for not buying one: they don't have a good way to charge it and don't want to wait 30 minutes at a charging station (assuming one is close enough to be reached).

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Yeah, if you don't have a spot to charge it at night, then EVs become quite inconvenient.

      I suppose over time, even apartement complexes (complices?) would have charging stations in their parking lots.

      I have a friend living in a condo downtown of the city I live in. And their HOA is currently talking about how many charging station they could support in the parking lots of the building and which residents want a charging station.

      Are there many places in the US that does not have a charging station within a

    • by _xeno_ ( 155264 )

      they don't have a good way to charge it and don't want to wait 30 minutes at a charging station (assuming one is close enough to be reached).

      The "don't have a good way to charge it" is the real problem. The charging times are largely a matter of thinking of EVs as we do ICE vehicles and they just aren't the same.

      First off, there's this weird view that you charge an EV like you do gas: that is, you drive it until it's almost empty, and then charge back to full. With an EV, you just constantly recharge it back to full as you can. (Or to 80% or whatever you need for your driving needs - the details aren't important.) There's no need to wait until t

      • Straight from Tesla, they say the longest battery life comes from a charging pattern of drain down to 20% (they used to say 10% so it's not clear which is better) and then charge up to 90% (they used to say 80%).

        Constantly recharging from above 20% will make your battery deteriorate faster.

        I charge exactly as prescribed and my long term max battery loss is far below the average reported / expected numbers from the bulk of people who just do whatever.

        It matters. It matters a lot if you're going to keep the

      • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @11:47PM (#62831575)

        The charging times are largely a matter of thinking of EVs as we do ICE vehicles and they just aren't the same.

        First off, there's this weird view that you charge an EV like you do gas: that is, you drive it until it's almost empty, and then charge back to full. With an EV, you just constantly recharge it back to full as you can.

        No doubt. I plug my phone in every night even though I can get through two reasonable days on a charge. I wish I could explain this to all my family members.

        Thing is, I like the ICE model. I fill up once a week or so, it takes less than ten minutes, and then I don't have to think about it. I personally would find it annoying to have to plug a car in when I get home and unplug it before I can leave. But honestly, it's not the end of the world and it's just not my preference.

        Related to charging infrastructure, the real problem is people who don't park their cars in their garage and that's a lot of people. Those are the people who need a public charger and either we stand them up at work or at stores, or people need a fast facility to replace gas stations. And people using those stations will want to drive until they're close to empty and rapidly recharge to full.

        Even charging stations at work aren't a panacea. At my company, for example, you pay by the hour you're using the space. That means I have to arrive, plug in, set a timer, then wander out to the garage and move my car an hour or two into the day. That's quite the inconvenience.

    • Chargers are a lot more ubiquitous than you think. Lots of dealerships have them installed. https://www.plugshare.com/ [plugshare.com]

      • Chargers are a lot more ubiquitous than you think. Lots of dealerships have them installed.

        Good to know. That doesn't change a few facts. One, I don't drive by any dealerships on a regular basis. Two, I don't want to hang around there for 15-30 minutes.

        But that wasn't my point. My point was this is a well know issue by anyone who's bought, not bought, or just talked about EVs any time in the last 15 years.

      • Putting chargers where they're not convenient is not helpful. It's just stat padding. How many people want to go plug their cars in on a road of car dealerships and strip malls for several hours (chargers at dealers tend to be L2, not DCFC)? People either need L2 chargers within a couple minutes walk of their homes (if they don't have a driveway/garage) which they can consistently have access to (no waiting on another car to leave) and can leave overnight (no penalties for overtime) or need DCFC within h

    • I've actually timed it: refilling my gas tank takes 3 minutes.

      Until EVs can charge to full capacity in 3 minutes or less, they will remain an automotive niche segment. Far too many of us do not have 30 minutes to waste (or 60, 90, or longer if there's a line) on long trips.

  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @09:22PM (#62831371) Homepage
    Vehicle batteries are expensive. The pipedream of rapid-charging goes against the grain of battery longevity.
    • Certainly you'd want to buy a car with enough range to avoid having to charge while you wait on a regular basis.
    • The latest generation of batteries are expected to last four or so times longer than the typical car replacement period. If fast charging all the time halved the lifetime it would be wasteful but not catastrophic.
    • The pipedream

      What pipedream? Charging speeds have been dropping steadily for years and there's ongoing R&D looking into it. It's not a pipedream, it's very frigging close to a reality.

  • Soon Electric Vehicles Could Charge Faster Than Your iPhone

    This either says something good about future electric vehicles or something bad about future iPhones ...

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      HOW DARE YOU SAY SOMETHING BAD ABOUT MY IPHONE!
      - Sent from my Apple brand iPhone (TM). Click here to purchase. This Ad was placed in all of my emails by Apple.

  • My ICE goes over 400 miles on a full tank (and it's not a tiny hyper efficient sub compact).
    My model 3 is good for about 240 miles at most. It says 268 max and I don't want to push it too close to zero.

    I'm already spending way more time charging for few miles in my Tesla. And the shorter range makes longer trips a bit dicey in my area while my ICE is absolutely guaranteed to make it all the way across the state and half way back on 1 tank.

    These people think a smaller battery I can charge more often at cha

  • It won't matter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Sunday August 28, 2022 @10:42PM (#62831515) Homepage
    After 'discussions' with EV haters on line it is clear that if for some people if charging a BEV takes a millisecond longer than gassing up then owning a BEV is impossible. These are the same people who can drive 1600km without stopping so owning a car with only 1599km range is impossible.

    The reality is modern BEVs can be charged plenty fast enough, there just needs to be more quality chargers in the key locations where the demand is. However chasing faster charging time is not where the real effort needs to go. It takes me 10 seconds to charge my BEV, 5 seconds to plug it in when I get home and 5 seconds to unplug the first time I go out the next day. Who cares when and for how long the car is charging as long as it done by the time I need it next.

    Where the real effort is actually needed is increasing the supply of street side and shared car park level 2 charging at long term car parks used by people who can't park at home.
    • For single car households, plugging in at night and unplugging in the morning solves many of the issues for typical daily driving. If you have multiple BEVs in the household, you might need one to charge quickly enough to swap the charger to the other car (depending on your main's capacity) without getting up at 2AM. It can become an issue. Add to that people with utility plans that give steep discounts for off peak charging and it complicates things further.

      Outside typical daily use cases, those that ta

      • by ukoda ( 537183 )
        If you have two cars the trick would be to have two chargers, assuming the physics of the location allow it. Tesla home wall chargers can communicate with each other to ensure the total power pull with multiple vehicles will not exceed what the home can handle. I think a key area of improvement will be making the car and power sources more aware of each other so the charging can take place when it best for the power source while still meeting the needs of the vehicle. For example I have written a script
    • It's also a trade-off. You might spend more time charging on a trip with a BEV, but you don't have to waste time at a gas station every week (or month).

      It depends whether you take long trips more often, or head to the local gas station more often. If you head to the gas station more often, then a BEV saves time.

      • by ukoda ( 537183 )
        Yes, this more true for people like me who live rural. The trip the gas station is a significant distance and not always on route. In many countries, like here in New Zealand, rural gas stations are closing making the travel distances for petrol longer.

        On the other hand rural locations are usually easier to fit solar panels to. I had enough north facing roof space for 12kW of panels, so I have been charging my car for free at home ever since they were installed.
  • Because that's what you'll need to charge an EV from empty in about the same time it takes to fill a gas tank

  • ... for charging outlets, at least here in the UK.

    There's an estimated 40,000 - yet it is estimated that needs to reach over 2 million by the end of the decade.
    Fine, that's achievable, but the impact that has on the energy grid will require the grid itself to increase capacity, while at the same time, reducing reliance on fossil fuels, otherwise the entire exercise is a waste of time.

    Across Europe, we are witnessing what energy shortages are doing, as a result of demand, war and more than likely, extreme pr

  • Will the new battery tech come first to phones or cars ?
    I suppose there are more money in phones.
    Now, new battery tech has been announced weekly/monthly for the last 5 years. Just give us money and we will go from lab to production in 1-2-5 years.

    And be aware, standard cars like Kia EV6 already charges from 10-80% in 18 minutes, We are not talking even double charging speed here. Lots of people saw 50kWh charged in 15-16 minutes this summer. Tesla is slow charging and needs 50% longer.

    All that said, I would

  • I still recall that the technology for thin film solar panels was 5 years away. 30 years later, I still can't buy them by the meter at my local hardware store fro a dollar.

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @02:40AM (#62831773)

    little-acknowledged downside to electric cars: recharging takes "upward of 15 to 30 minutes."

    The problem of charging time comes up in virtually every discussion around electric cars, whether it be among the science-and-tech crowd, policy makers, or Joe Schmoe and his friends trying to figure out if their lifestyles can accommodate "fill-ups" that may in some cases take an hour or more. Heck, it's even referred to in TFA:

    For many Americans, electric vehicles are alluring up until the point they think about taking it on a long road trip.

    "Little acknowledged"? I don't think so.

    • by Alcari ( 1017246 )
      Amusingly, I've been to a charging point a grand total of three times in the past year and a half, charging either at home or my destination every other time. I don't really charge it on the road at all.

      Of course, I have a 300km range, and if I want to use all of that charge without driving in a circle, I need to cross national borders. It's kind a luxury position.
    • No, what they're trying to say that it's seldom acknowledged that it's a problem by EV boosters — which is true but misleading, because it's not a real problem for most people.

  • It's like saying that fiber-to-the-home gives you 10gbit internet.... yes, it could, if the upstream ISPs would support it. Likewise, you COULD charge your batteries at that speed if your local power grid didn't melt down if everyone does that.

  • And I have no desire to be standing anywhere near an iPhone that's drawing upwards of 50 odd KW

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