Oman Daily Observer

New battery design can charge an electric car in 10 minutes

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A NEW lithium-ion battery design makes it possible for electric vehicle drivers to charge their cars and hit the road in as little as ten minutes, according to a new study.

The quick charge gives drivers up to 200 miles per ten minute charge while maintainin­g 2,500 charging cycles, the researcher­s behind the study say. That is equivalent to over half a million miles throughout the battery’s life, a press release notes. All that happens in the time it takes you to brew a morning coffee.

Researcher­s say that this design could finally make electric vehicles a viable competitor for traditiona­l vehicles. “Range anxiety” is the fear of being stranded if your electric vehicle runs out of charge which has been a common barrier to adoption for many drivers.

In the study, published on Wednesday in Joule, researcher­s from Penn State University describe an asymmetric approach to fastchargi­ng batteries that mitigates the effects of natural degradatio­n of the lithium-ion batteries. This is achieved by quickly charging at a high temperatur­e and then storing the charge more slowly at a cooler temperatur­e. The researcher­s found that this approach allowed the batteries to avoid performanc­e loss usually created from “battery plaque,” called lithium plating or solid-electrolyt­einterphas­e (SEI) growth, which typically grows on batteries over time when exposed to heat.

This is a departure from other forms of lithium batteries which charge and store at the same temperatur­e and can take anywhere from 40 to 60 minutes (or more) to charge, depending on the temperatur­e of the charging area.

“No matter the vehicle is in the summer of Arizona or winter of Wisconsin, the battery is always charged at 60 degree C,” Xiao-guang Yang, coauthor and assistant research professor at Penn State, said in an email. “That said, our approach, for the first time, makes charging of electric vehicles truly

The researcher­s were able to achieve this lopsided charging effect by adding a thin nickel foil to the battery, which absorbs the initial brunt of the charging heat while warming the battery and then transferri­ng heat to the battery itself for a quick, hightemper­ature charge. Counterint­uitively, but luckily, the team also observed that quickly charging their batteries at high heat also reduced the cooling needed afterwards because the battery had less time to generate significan­t internal heat.

“We demonstrat­e that charging a battery at a high temperatur­e (60 degrees C) is, in fact, highly beneficial in the context of extreme fast charging, as long as we limit the time of [exposure],” said Yang. “We believe that this is a revolution­ary approach and completely changed the convention­al wisdom regarding the optimal temperatur­e for lithium-ion batteries.”

In order to charge your car in just ten minutes with these new batteries in the future though, you might have to buy a new car or at least replace the battery.

“[The car] would require a new battery with our internal heating structure built in,” Chao-yang Wang, coauthor of the study and director of the Electroche­mical Engine Center at Penn State, said in an email. weatherand regioninde­pendent.”

 ??  ?? A member of staff charges a Volkswagen e-golf electric car during its launch for use in its ride-hailing service in Kigali, Rwanda. — Reuters
A member of staff charges a Volkswagen e-golf electric car during its launch for use in its ride-hailing service in Kigali, Rwanda. — Reuters

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