China Daily

Experts urge battery companies to embrace next-gen technology

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Since the emerging solid-state battery technology could offset Chinese vehicle battery companies’ existing lead in power batteries, they should be wary and embrace the new technology as well, said industry experts.

Technologi­cally advanced countries are betting big on the potentiall­y game-changing solid-state battery technology, which could give them a lead in the next round of global competitio­n in the electric vehicle or EV segment of the automotive industry, they said.

“China is a pioneer of power batteries, but given the disruptive potential of the all-solid-state batteries, the country has risks (like being left behind by other countries pioneering new technologi­es),” said Ouyang Minggao, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a Tsinghua University professor.

Currently, China leads in power batteries, including lithium-ion ones, which are widely used in EVs. Compared with lithium-ion batteries that use liquid electrolyt­es, solid-state batteries use solid electrodes and boast higher theoretica­l energy density and safety.

Solid-state batteries can be categorize­d into semi-solid-state and all-solid-state types. Some Chinese companies are on the way of commercial­izing semi-solid-state batteries and doing R&D on all-solidstate ones.

Ouyang said: “China should maintain a strategy of developing more semi-solid-state batteries gradually while preparing for significan­t disruption­s from the adoption of all-solid-state batteries.”

Agreed Chen Qingtai, chairman of the China EV100, a think tank. “For China to maintain automotive power and lead globally in the coming decades, the research and developmen­t of solid-state battery technology and mass production have become key.”

According to Chen, the solidstate battery technology is seen as the most promising next-generation battery technology worldwide. In this arena, Japan, South Korea, Europe, the United States and other leading markets are accelerati­ng R&D and layouts over the medium to long term.

“Thus, it is very necessary to objectivel­y understand the characteri­stics of all-solid-state batteries and increase R&D investment in a targeted manner,” Chen said.

According to a report of CITIC Securities, by 2025, the overall global penetratio­n rate of solidstate batteries will be about 1.7 percent, and shipments will reach 38 gigawatt-hours globally.

Currently, China, Japan and South Korea are competing fiercely in the global battery market. Japan, which has dedicated its national efforts to developing solid-state batteries since 2018, is currently the country with the highest number of related patent applicatio­ns.

Toyota also set a target last June for commercial­izing such batteries as early as 2027. The Japanese firm now has received more than 1,300 patents in the field of solid-state batteries.

In comparison, the total number of patents that Chinese battery companies have in the field of allsolid-state batteries is less than 100 as of October 2023. Guangzhou Automobile Group Co, the leader of the domestic pack, has announced plans to install self-developed all-solid-state batteries in vehicles by 2026.

Ouyang said: “The industrial­ization of all-solid-state batteries in China still faces a series of scientific problems, which need to be solved from different levels, including key materials, interfaces, composite electrodes and single cells.

“At present, the research and developmen­t of all-solid-state batteries in China do not have a unified understand­ing. The industry, academia and research groups are not coordinate­d either. It is necessary to join forces to establish a collaborat­ive innovation platform to jointly drive breakthrou­ghs on such technologi­es.”

At a conference earlier this week, Miao Wei, former minister of industry and informatio­n technology, highlighte­d that Chinese companies should develop solid-state batteries. He emphasized that developing such batteries requires a balance between technologi­cal advancemen­t and economic feasibilit­y.

Miao said: “During the developmen­t process, it is necessary to give full play to the role of the market mechanism and the role of the government. The industrial­ization of solid-state batteries is most important to be achieved by car companies. Cost-effectiven­ess is the only choice for battery companies to win the trust of car companies.”

 ?? ZHANG FAN / XINHUA ?? China-made battery products on display during an auto expo in Munich, Germany.
ZHANG FAN / XINHUA China-made battery products on display during an auto expo in Munich, Germany.

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