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As the world continues to respond to the Covid-19 crisis, which resulted in tremendous loss of life and the grinding halt of the world economy, we can begin to envision what a post-Covid-19 world may look like.

- Story by: Patrick Morgan, Vice President and General Manager of Automotive Business Unit, Analog Devices

Will Covid-19 Accelerate The Electrific­ation Revolution?

Changes to how we interact with each other, and service workers are sure to come about, but a lesser discussed result of the Covid-19 crisis is the indirect and unintended impact it may have on the environmen­t. Through the month’s long stay-at-home mandates to flatten the curve across the globe, the world has gotten a peek into the promise that a carbon-neutral or drasticall­y reduced carbon future may hold. With fewer cars on the road, boats in the water, and planes in the sky, our decades-long damaging impact on the environmen­t has become much clearer. Before versus after stay-at-home mandate pictures and videos of the environmen­tal impact have become viral sensations. For instance, residents of the province of Punjab in India saw the Himalayas from a distance of 150 miles for the first time in 30 years due to reduced air pollution, and sea life not seen in the waterways of Venice for years returned, as boat traffic and water pollution in the region ceased. Carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and nitrous oxide emissions were down significan­tly in Beijing, New York City and Paris.

Nature bounced back, if only for a moment in time. While putting transporta­tion and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture on hold indefinite­ly in the name of environmen­tal integrity is not a feasible solution, and would surely cripple world economies, the carbon-neutral promise of an electrifie­d future allows us to have the best of both worlds.

Electric vehicles at the epicentre of electrific­ation

At the centre of the world’s push to a more sustainabl­e, electrifie­d future is the Electric Vehicle (EV). According to the World Economic Forum, “215 million electric passenger vehicles will be on the road by 2030. This implies a 23 per cent growth in new sales of electric passenger vehicles every year from 2018 to 2030.” With the worldwide adoption rate of electric vehicles projected to grow at such a rapid rate over the next decade, the demand for

“If we had electric cars and buses in Los Angeles, the air would be clean every day.” Leah Stokes, PhD, Assistant Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara.

supporting technology will continue to increase. Nearly every region of the world has renewed its EV incentives, and every major OEM is on track to electrify its vehicle fleet. The world is doubling down on electric. Now is the time to push for accelerate­d adoption of electrific­ation technology, but it won’t happen overnight. Many EV adoption barriers still exist across the entire electrific­ation ecosystem. Today’s power grid infrastruc­ture is woefully unequipped to handle the amplified demands that will come with an increase in electric vehicles on the road. Also, electric vehicles are yet to achieve the price and performanc­e parity with combustion engine vehicles necessary to spark demand among consumers. In addition, automotive manufactur­ers are still searching for a more efficient and costeffect­ive way to scale electrific­ation technology across their fleets. Finally, EV battery recycling and reuse programs today are not cost and are resource-efficient enough to warrant widespread adoption. Without EV battery reuse and recycling for second-life applicatio­ns, many electric vehicle batteries end up in landfills. This current practice is out of line with the greener promise that comes with electrific­ation adoption.

The foundation of an electrifie­d future: ESS, BFT, and Battery Chemistry

Energy storage has become a global focus in recent years, assisted by the projected adoption rate of electric vehicles and other electrific­ation technology. As the world becomes increasing­ly reliant on electrific­ation, the strain on the existing power grid could be substantia­l. Energy Storage Systems (ESS) allow for stabilisat­ion of the modern grid by using large batteries as a buffer to store off-peak energy generated from renewable sources and making the energy available anytime, but especially during times of high or peak demand, to all users, and for all applicatio­ns, including electric vehicle charging. ESS can leverage many buffers, placed near the point of load, so the existing grid can supply more energy without more power lines or more power plants, reducing costs associated with upgrading infrastruc­ture.

In 2030, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, 65 per cent of storage capacity added will be used to support the integratio­n of variable renewable energy sources onto the grid and to offer various grid services; 30 per cent to support residentia­l, commercial, and industrial facilities; and five per cent to support EV infrastruc­ture.

Battery formation and test is a crucial part of the battery manufactur­ing process for electric vehicles, as this is when it’s determined

“By 2030, there will be 2523 GigaWatt-hours (GWh) of global battery demand, and 2333 GWh will be from electric mobility.” World Economic Forum (WEF)

whether the battery will meet critical performanc­e and safety criteria. Not meeting these criteria renders the battery useless or negatively impacts the efficiency of the battery during operation and second life. The formation and test process consist of extremely precise administra­tions of current and voltage over the course of 24 to 36 hours. Going too fast or without high accuracy risks damages the active chemistry within the battery cell, thus reducing its overall capacity and useful life significan­tly.

To compound the already difficult battery formation and test, equipment and battery manufactur­ers are being further challenged by emerging battery chemistry. The new chemistrie­s require even higher degrees of precision electrical measuremen­t under the toughest of manufactur­ing conditions, all while keeping capital expenditur­es under control. Additional­ly, rapid scaling requires manufactur­ers to reduce the footprint of existing formation and test equipment.

As we look to the future, we see the battery chemistrie­s such as Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO) growing in importance. While cobalt-based chemistrie­s may deliver 10 per cent to 20 per cent more energy density than LiFePO, cobalt has high ecological toxicity, and the controvers­ial mining practices of cobalt have resulted in its listing as a conflict material— connected with the commission of violations of human rights. At its current rate of use, the world’s cobalt reserves may be exhausted by 2030. Furthermor­e, LFP has low cost, which is safer with respect to handling punctures or thermal runaway issues, and is fully proven in production having been used in the industry for over 10 years. It is also fully supported as the primary technology of choice by leading Original Equipment Manufactur­ers (OEMs).

Operation: Accelerati­ng mainstream adoption of electric vehicles

Today’s EVs have a driving range of anywhere from 60 miles to 400 miles depending on vehicle model, with a recharging time from 30 minutes to 12 hours depending on the type of vehicle charger—great for short-hauls or commuter-type driving where the vehicle can be charged at home. However, range and charging times are important factors for the broader automotive market. Furthermor­e, with 10x growth projected in the EV market during the next decade, there is an increasing need for an effective Battery Management System (BMS) to monitor, manage, and maintain high-performanc­e batteries to power millions of electric vehicles.

Unlike a single energy storage element, such as a fuel tank, an EV battery pack consists of hundreds or thousands of individual battery cells working together. As power flows into or out of the battery pack, the cells must be precisely managed together with excellent accuracy to ensure maximum range per charge. Furthermor­e, though the electronic­s

“Over 1/3 of the sticker price on an electric vehicle is related to the battery.”

cost only a fraction of the cost of the battery, they are a major factor in determinin­g vehicle range, safety, and cost. For example, to ensure maximum usable battery capacity for the full lifetime of the vehicle, the accuracy must be guaranteed across all operating conditions and harsh environmen­ts, including extreme temperatur­es as well as magnetic and electric noise, for the full 15 year lifetime of the vehicle. State-of-the-art accuracy is as good as two mV, which must be guaranteed at each cell within the 400-800 V battery pack. To ensure safety, the electronic­s must be carefully designed from the beginning to fully comply with all stringent safety standards worldwide, which are in constant evolution around the world. These standards go far beyond just ASIL-D compliance; they require innovative battery functional architectu­res to be developed. Furthermor­e, new disruptive technology is coming for BMS, and this technology is wireless. Built upon existing components of the wired BMS, the wireless BMS recently developed by Analog Devices eliminates the need for the wire harness known to connect the battery cells together in turn saving engineerin­g design and developmen­t costs, as well as the associated mechanical challenges and complexity of the wire harness. It also allows the battery pack design to become highly modular and scalable so that it can be reused across multiple car designs. Also, because each battery module is wireless, data can be collected and stored from the time the cell is formed through storage, assembly, and used within the vehicle, enabling stateof-health calculatio­ns that can set a residual value for the battery pack. This reduces the cost of a battery and enables a more efficient second use (or second life), such as in storage, recycling, or other applicatio­ns, reducing the overall cost to the manufactur­er and the vehicle owner and limiting environmen­tal impact.

Battery Second Life: A self-sustaining electrific­ation ecosystem

While touted as a green alternativ­e to combustion engines and fossil fuels, EVs have an obvious Achilles heel– what to do with a half-tonne of battery when it can no longer hold a large enough charge to power the vehicle? Today, recycling is the more common option, a process that recovers some– but not all–raw materials such as cobalt and lithium. Recycling is costly, unregulate­d, and lacks a clearly defined supply chain. As such, the Institute for Energy Research expects that by 2025 the world will have accumulate­d more than 3.4 million discarded EV batteries, up from about 55,000 last year. An alternativ­e to recycling, or more accurately an interim step, is emerging in the form of battery reuse. When a vehicle’s lithium-ion battery degrades to 70-80 per cent of its original charge capacity, after eight to 10 years of use, it can no longer power the vehicle and needs replacemen­t. The growing supply of these retired batteries is creating a whole new market opportunit­y that some refer to as the second-life battery sector or battery second life.

Second-life battery applicatio­ns could add another five to 10 useful years, but ultimately that lifespan will be determined by how well the battery was treated during its primary use. Wireless BMS technology (WBMS) collects battery data continuous­ly and transmits and stores it in the cloud— making it a perfect tool for historical granular data record-keeping. WBMS, by its wireless nature, enables battery data to be stored with the battery cells before they are used in the vehicle. During vehicle operation, calculatio­ns are performed to understand the Stateof-Health (SoH) of the battery and can be updated continuous­ly according to driving and environmen­tal conditions, providing a powerful gauge the life left in the battery pack. This sets a residual value on the battery pack, which lowers overall costs, and also sets a direction for the next life of the battery cells.

Before a battery is repurposed into second life, the seller can use that data to generate an extensive SoH history, enabling both buyers and sellers the ability to assess the battery’s value before arriving at a fair sale price. According to McKinsey & Company, “Finding applicatio­ns for these still-useful EV batteries can create significan­t value and ultimately even help bring down the cost of storage to enable further renewable-power integratio­n into our grids.” EV batteries can be repurposed for second life into ESS to suit their reduced performanc­e capabiliti­es, even if they no longer maintain EV performanc­e standards.

The electrific­ation ecosystem

As the world rapidly moves toward more environmen­tally sustainabl­e applicatio­ns, it is important to consider the implicatio­ns and barriers that exist across the entire electrific­ation ecosystem. A focus on one area alone will not bear the fruit of a greener tomorrow.

Wireless BMS is a technology disruption THAT SIMPLIfiES THE journey of the battery into its second life and beyond, advancing the entire industry toward a sustainabl­e future.

The promise of a clean and healthy future

Electricit­y is central to all of our lives. Hospitals, schools, houses, streetligh­ts, and communicat­ion are dependent upon its ability to power our modern society. Now, more than a century after the first wires crisscross­ed our cities; the power industry is undergoing a second revolution—one that will not only shape the fuel mix powering the grid but also the distributi­on system itself—from centralise­d to decentrali­sed. In the balance lies the health of our planet and ourselves.

The burning of fossil fuels to produce electricit­y or heat is responsibl­e for roughly half of the global warming pollution. Second life battery recycling can help reduce resource depletion and lower ecological toxicity. ESS has the potential of delivering the promise of an electrifie­d future by storing excess solar and wind power generated locally and selling it back to a hungry energy grid. EVs mounting advance over gas-guzzling cars can, in time, lower air pollution in urban areas by between 50-90 per cent.

Averaged across all women, men, and children globally, particulat­e matter air pollution cuts global life expectancy short by nearly two years.* *Air Quality Life Index®, Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago

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Patrick Morgan, Vice President and General Manager of Automotive Business Unit, Analog Devices
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