Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VW: Battery tests promising

- MONICA RAYMUNT

Volkswagen AG said its battery start-up has seen promising results with solid-state cells for electric vehicles, a win for the German carmaker as it pushes to make EVs more efficient and less expensive.

A solid-state prototype from VW’s U.S. partner QuantumSca­pe Corp. “significan­tly exceeded” industry targets in recent tests, the carmaker said last week in a statement. During tests by VW’s battery unit PowerCo over several months, the cell saw only 5% storage capacity loss after more than 1,000 charging cycles, the equivalent of 310,000 miles on the road. VW said industry targets for this developmen­t phase are 700 charging cycles and a maximum loss of 20% capacity.

“These are very encouragin­g results,” PowerCo head Frank Blome was quoted as saying. “The final result of this developmen­t could be a battery cell that enables long ranges, can be charged super-quickly and practicall­y does not age.”

QuantumSca­pe wants to bring the cell to market “as quickly as possible,” founder and Chief Executive Officer Jagdeep Singh said. But scaling up production of automotive-grade batteries has proven tricky and has led the company to put more emphasis on batteries for consumer electronic­s in its investor letters.

EV and battery makers are racing to commercial­ize new technologi­es, including next-generation anodes and sodium-ion and solid-state batteries, to power EVs more cheaply and efficientl­y. Toyota has partnered with oil refiner and petrochemi­cals company Idemitsu Kosan Co. to commercial­ize solid-state batteries as soon as 2027, while Chinese EV maker BYD Co.’s subsidiary is building a sodium-ion battery facility as part of a joint venture in eastern China.

Solid-state batteries replace the convention­al liquid electrolyt­e and the separator, which are both flammable, with a solid separator made of ceramic, glass or polymers. This innovation, if proven to work beyond the lab and reproduced flawlessly hundreds of thousands of times in a factory, could make EV batteries safer, smaller and faster-charging.

The results of the test, carried out at PowerCo labs in Germany, were first revealed by QuantumSca­pe during the company’s third-quarter earnings call in October. The battery start-up didn’t mention Volkswagen, its customer and largest shareholde­r, during the call.

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