Los Angeles Times

Toyota, universiti­es team up to research EV batteries

- By Brent Snavely Snavely writes for the Detroit Free Press/ McClatchy.

Toyota plans to spend $35 million on partnershi­ps with several universiti­es, including Stanford, to study ways to make better batteries for electric vehicles.

The Japanese automaker said the universiti­es will use artificial intelligen­ce to test different battery chemistry combinatio­ns and to explore whether other materials, such as magnesium, could be used to make better batteries, said Brian Storey, program manager for the Toyota Research Institute.

Hybrid, plug-in hybrid and battery electric vehicles are powered by lithium ion batteries — a technology that Storey said was invented nearly 40 years ago.

“And we are just now beginning to perfect them,” Storey said.

Existing batteries continue to be costly and have range limitation­s that have held back industry sales compared with cheaper but less fuel-efficient gasoline engines.

Storey said Toyota and its university partners want to explore new ways of designing batteries, new ways of combining battery chemistry and other materials.

“There is an infinite number of knobs that you can tune when you are doing developmen­t work,” Storey said. “The hope is that the use of artificial intelligen­ce will help us sort through the infinite number of things you can do.”

Toyota’s initial partners include Stanford University, MIT, the University of Michigan, the State University of New York at Buffalo, the University of Connecticu­t and the British-based materials science company Ilika. Toyota Research Institute also is in ongoing discussion­s with additional research partners.

Toyota said the programs will follow parallel paths, as researcher­s work to identify new materials for use in future energy systems as well as to develop tools and processes that can accelerate the design and developmen­t of new materials more broadly.

The Toyota Research Institute, created in 2015, was establishe­d to conduct research into auto safety for autonomous cars, increase access to mobility for those who otherwise cannot drive and help translate outdoor mobility technology into products for indoor mobility.

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