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Toyota's game-changing solid-state battery en route for 2021 debut

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    Toyota's game-changing solid-state battery en route for 2021 debut

    https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Technology/Toyota-s-game-changing-solid-state-battery-en-route-for-2021-debut https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Technology/Toyota-s-game-changing-solid-state-battery-en-route-for-2021-debut

    TOKYO -- A trip of 500 km on one charge. A recharge from zero to full in 10 minutes. All with minimal safety concerns. The solid-state battery being introduced by Toyota promises to be a game changer not just for electric vehicles but for an entire industry.

    The technology is a potential cure-all for the drawbacks facing electric vehicles that run on conventional lithium-ion batteries, including the relatively short distance traveled on a single charge as well as charging times. Toyota plans to be the first company to sell an electric vehicle equipped with a solid-state battery in the early 2020s. The world's largest automaker will unveil a prototype next year.

    The electric vehicles being developed by Toyota will have a range more than twice the distance of a vehicle running on a conventional lithium-ion battery under the same conditions. All accomplished without sacrificing interior space in even the most compact vehicle.

    Solid-state batteries are expected to become a viable alternative to lithium-ion batteries that use aqueous electrolyte solutions. The innovation would lower the risk of fires, and multiply energy density, which measures the energy a battery can deliver compared to its weight.

    It would take roughly 10 minutes to charge an electric vehicle equipped with a solid-state battery, cutting the recharging time by two-thirds. The battery can extend the driving distance of a compact electric vehicle while maintaining legroom.

    Toyota stands at the top of the global heap with over 1,000 patents involving solid-state batteries. Nissan Motor plans to develop its own solid-state battery which will power a non-simulation vehicle by 2028.

    The shift toward the new battery technology will also have an effect on companies further down the supply chain.

    Japanese auto materials makers are rushing to set up the necessary infrastructure to supply automakers. Mitsui Mining and Smelting, commonly known as Mitsui Kinzoku, will start up a pilot facility that will make solid electrolytes for the batteries.

    The production site, located at a research and development center in Saitama Prefecture, will be able to produce dozens of tons of solid electrolyte annually staring next year, enough to fulfill orders for prototypes.

    Oil company Idemitsu Kosan is installing solid electrolyte production equipment at its Chiba Prefecture site with the aim of beginning operation next year. Manufacturing solid electrolytes requires solidifying sulfides, which is a specialty of the metal and chemical industry. Sumitomo Chemical is developing material as well.

    Japanese manufacturers like Sony and Panasonic have been pioneers in commercializing battery cells for vehicles. But since the late 2000s, Chinese rivals have emerged to prominence. Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited, also known as CATL, is now the world's largest supplier of lithium ion batteries. Japan's Asahi Kasei, once the global leader in battery separator material, gave up the crown last year to Shanghai Energy.

    Electric vehicles are anticipated to become commonplace amid the global shift away from carbon. The Japanese government has been encouraging the domestic development of solid-state batteries, under the outlook that most of the technology relating to automotive performance will depend on China if the status quo holds.

    The government is putting together a fund of about 2 trillion yen ($19.2 billion) that will support decarbonization technology. Policymakers will consider using those funds to provide subsidies of hundreds of billions of yen that will fund the development of the new batteries.

    The goal is to support the development of a mass-production infrastructure within Japan. Because solid-state batteries use lithium, an element with limited global reserves, the government will assist in procuring the material.

    The rest of the world is following suit. Germany's Volkswagen plans to have production running for solid-state batteries as soon as 2025 via a joint-venture with a U.S. startup.

    Chinese tech group QingTao (Kunshan) Energy Development will spend over 1 billion yuan ($153 million) into R&D of solid-state batteries, among other areas. The investment will last for three years starting in 2021.

    #2
    GM to go all electric by 2030.

    Comment


      #3
      And Alberta is going to put all their eggs in the oil basket? What could possibly go wrong?

      Comment


        #4
        This sounds like it should be the answer to the range problems and charging time issues. However there will be a need for very, very high charging currents or extremely high voltages to transfer that much energy in 10 minutes. That problem can be solved by storage at charging points, but at an added cost.

        Comment


          #5
          Thanks for posting some news that isn't all doom and gloom.

          Never bet against human ingenuity.

          Still probably not the quantum leap that will be required to make large scale intermittents cost competitive, but a big step in the right direction if it comes to fruition.

          Please keep us updated whenever you find news such as this.

          Comment


            #6
            Chuckchuck
            I live in southern Alberta next to a huge wind farm that is constantly increasing in size and we have a number of solar sites in southern Alberta and are building some huge ones. Shows what you know.......

            Comment


              #7
              PG great to hear.

              I know there are lots of innovative people and companies in Alberta and they are making progress. But many of the Alberta posters on this site say nothing good about solar, wind and other innovative renewables or trying to diversify an oil dependent dependent economy. Its oil or nothing no matter what.

              The Kenney government also seems to be part of the problem.

              Comment


                #8
                An update on the Self charging Nano Diamond batteries I posted about last summer.

                Including and interview with Professor Tom Scott, leader of the University of Bristol team that first publicized the invention of the nuclear diamond battery back in 2016.

                It seems they may be grossly exagerating the potential power production and footpring of these batteries. But then again, these guys are in competition too.

                Like most things that sound too good to be true...

                https://newatlas.com/energy/arkenlight-nuclear-diamond-batteries/ https://newatlas.com/energy/arkenlight-nuclear-diamond-batteries/

                As is, might still have some practical applications for devices requiring very small current over long time periods.

                Comment


                  #9
                  And now you know how we will pay for it, subsidizing and penalizing at the same time.

                  https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/carbon-tax-hike-new-climate-plan-1.5837709 Ottawa to hike federal carbon tax to $170 a tonne by 2030

                  Gas prices to rise 37c a liter.

                  Stop posting garbage chuck, none of those renewables could EVER stand on their own economic merit no matter how much research is put in.
                  Last edited by jazz; Dec 11, 2020, 12:36.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Charging stations using hydrogen are probably most likely. Hydrogen can be produced cleanly from natural gas.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                      Charging stations using hydrogen are probably most likely. Hydrogen can be produced cleanly from natural gas.
                      Or, if you were aware of the second law of thermodynamics, you would skip all of the intermediate steps, And just use the natural gas directly.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                        Or, if you were aware of the second law of thermodynamics, you would skip all of the intermediate steps, And just use the natural gas directly.
                        Just read the CBC article Jazz posted and yes indeed Justin Trudeau is going to raise the carbon tax $170 a tonne by 2030. That translates to just over $8.50 a gigajoule of natural gas. Does this make natural gas cost prohibitive?!?!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
                          Just read the CBC article Jazz posted and yes indeed Justin Trudeau is going to raise the carbon tax $170 a tonne by 2030. That translates to just over $8.50 a gigajoule of natural gas. Does this make natural gas cost prohibitive?!?!
                          With no viable alternatives, it won't.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                            With no viable alternatives, it won't.
                            The solar panels are all covered with ice and hoar frost the past 3 days. I dont see anybdy bothering to sc**** them off. Seems like crawling on your slippery roof to clean panels might just shorten your life faster than covid. You will be only driving your tesla or toyota about 100 days of the yr.

                            But thats probably what the great reset wants anyway. Total control over all aspects of your life. They decide if you drive today or not, or if you heat your home or not.

                            California has all the sunshine in the world and they cant even keep the lights on even with EVs with about a 0.05% market share.

                            This is all clown world garbage.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              If oil is going to be worthless in a generation then we better pump like hell now no????

                              Comment

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