Slashdot Mirror


Electric Car Nano-Batteries Aim For 500-Mile Range

An anonymous reader writes "Consortium members read like a Who's Who in technology research for the Battery 500 Project which aims to use nanotechnology to extend the range of all-electric cars 200 miles beyond the 300-mile range of gasoline powered cars. IBM, the University of California at Berkeley and all five of our US National Labs are collaborating to make the 500-mile electric car battery. Within two years, they promise to have a new kind of battery technology in place for the 500-mile electric car. If that happens, then I predict a mass exodus from gasoline to electric powered cars that will make the Toyota Prius look like a fad."

13 of 650 comments (clear)

  1. It's not news by jhcaocf197912 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    until it actually happens.... This is more like a press-release rather than actual news.

    1. Re:It's not news by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Next you'll be asking the moderators to read the comments before modding them!

    2. Re:It's not news by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Especially when it's battery technology, which hasn't improved much in... how many decades?

      I guess we have to hit every myth in the book on this thread, no?

      The best secondary cells on the market in 1989 were the newly introduced Nickel Metal Hydride cells, which, at introduction, boasted 40Wh/kg. Today, the best secondary cells on the market are 200Wh/kg li-ions (which are *way* better than the li-ions from 1999). We're talking a 4.5x increase in energy density and a 10x increase in power density in 20 years.

      It's true that for much of the 20th century, battery tech largely stagnated. However, then came along the consumer electronics revolution of the 1980s, and people actually started putting real money into rechargeable batteries. That, combined with our modern understanding of materials and fabrication allowed for a boom in battery technology, which today is about a 10% increase in energy density per year. And that rate is rising, not falling. And EVs will probably make it rise even faster.

      --
      I just invaded Grammar Czechoslovakia and duped Grammar Neville Chamberlain; now it's on to Grammar Poland.
  2. Ifs by clarkkent09 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Within two years, they promise to have a new kind of battery technology in place for the 500-mile electric car. If that happens,

    and the cost of the battery allows the car to be similarly priced to a gasoline car, and the charging time is reasonably short so when you run out you are not carless for 8 hours or something, and the infrastructure is in place to charge the car on the road,

    then I predict a mass exodus from gasoline to electric powered cars that will make the Toyota Prius look like a fad.

    There, fixed that for you

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  3. Re:2 Years by Mr.+Roadkill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People will drive their cars and people will eventually switch but 2 years is MUCH too soon to think that we can start tearing down gas stations.

    I expect that I'll still be driving the same car in five years, at which time it will be 30 years old.

    Would I drive a new car if I could afford it? Possibly. Would it benefit me financially to do so? Probably not.

    I've done some reasonably major repairs in the last couple of years - a reconditioned cylinder head, a wheel bearing, the distributor - but I've still spent far less in higher fuel consumption and those repairs than I'd have spent in interest on a loan and lost in depreciation on a newer vehicle.

    Yeah, it'd be nice to have a lower carbon footprint from a more fuel-efficient hybrid. It'd be even nicer to have a slightly lower carbon footprint from an all-electric vehicle (we use brown coal for most of our electricity in my corner of Australia), and even better once our Illustrious Leaders convince the Great Unwashed to let us go nuclear. Trouble is, for all intents and purposes we're a single-income household (one adult is a disability pensioner - car, diesel spill, lamp post) with two kids and all the expenses that go with that. If it's a choice between environmental righteousness and actually maintaining a functional household, the household wins. Even on purely financial terms, without using my family as a rationalisation, keeping my old car going wins.

  4. Re:500 Mile Range=Revolutionary by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I used to be super-excited for electric cars to come out. Then I realized I have no place to charge one. I park on the street, and I can't run an extension cord from my house to my car.

    Maybe at some point in the future I'll have a house with a proper garage, but until then, I'll be stuck with gasoline.

    --
    Qxe4
  5. Re:2 Years by hagar� · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Theres nothing at all wrong with your Carbon footprint using an old car. Lets say you get a new one every 3 years, regardless of the energy consumption of the car itself, the energy and resources used in building a new car is quite alot. Pressed steel, oil based plastic bumpers, mouldings, interior parts, glass, paints, miles worth of wiring and electrical components, dozens of sensors, and the thousands of spare parts that need to be made to support a new model by the manufacturer. All produced by nice large factories who are about as carbon neutral as that brown coal power station. However you have one car over 30 years, instead of 10 cars over 30 years, and lets face it, a recon head, a dizzy and a wheel bearing arent alot at all for 30 years of use parts wise. I'd say you are doing well really. You are an automotive recycler. Be proud!

    --
    Insert something insightful here, or I'll insert something painful there.
  6. Re:cue exploding battery packs.... by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    yeah right, its going to be REAL PRACTICAL to put 500 mile range into a battery pack. the gasoline nozzle pumps 3 MEGAWATTS of energy into your gas tank in 2 minutes. try to get a battery pack to recharge that fast or hold that much energy and what you have is a BOMB (literally, a coupla sticks of dynamite)..

    However, you cannot fill up the gas tank at home. That is one of the killer features of the battery: no more annoying visits to the gas station, just plug it in when you get home. No more fiddling around with plastic gloves/wait for your fingers to stop smelling of diesel.

    And seriously, driving more than 800km in a day is a long stretch.

    But I do not really believe that range will be the range on a motorway for a holiday-packed car :)

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
  7. Re:impossible for consumers to operate it. by Rakishi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're making contradictory assumptions. You can't claim that rapid charging is only for long distance trips and then claim that the 99% of commuters on highways will need to use it.

    The only people who need a quick recharge are those going more than 500 miles at once with no long stops. If they stop to sleep then that's 10 hours to recharge at a hotel/motel. If they get to their destination same thing. If they stop to eat same thing. If the car isn't driving it can be charging.

    With some rare exception even long distance trips are generally less than 500 miles one way and probably even both ways.

    It's silly to take a system designed for gasoline and apply it to electric cars with no consideration for the inherent differences. Unlike gasoline electricity is everywhere. Every street, building, house and apartment has a gigantic ever refilling storage tank of it. You don't need to have special locations with giant underground tanks and tanker trunks to deal with it.

  8. How to generate huge amounts of cheap electricity: by MrMista_B · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nuclear.

    Comparatively cheap per megawatt, and per megawatt, the most enviromentally friendly power source we've yet discovered.

  9. I kind of believe it's not far off by ldcroberts · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I sold my car, and bought an electric cycle this year, and I'm pretty impressed with it. I commute on it - charge it overnight once or twice a week, and don't get a sweat up even on hills into a head wind. Costs $5 per year to charge it, and $12 to insure it. Compared to my car it's ridiculously cheap - and because most of the time I'm passing cars that are waiting for other cars ahead, I get to work in around the same time as a car (12 minutes by bike. When there's no traffic I can do it 10 minutes in a car, but a normal morning is 15-20 minutes). I've seen those tuk-tuk's around where a bike pulls a carriage and takes a couple of people in the back. All you need is a carriage on it and a bigger motor and you could go anywhere in the city on it all weather, but to be honest it's not too hot to wear rain gear on the bike anyway as you aren't working, the battery is. I had to go out of town on a bus instead, but cost about the same as petrol for the trip would have or maybe even cheaper. Not quite the same freedom as having a car, but at less than 10% of the cost, I'm happy enough. I would say that within 3 years, at least 30% of the population will move to electric simply because of the cost. And I think it will be bikes not cars that show the biggest growth.

  10. Re:cue exploding battery packs.... by xaxa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The car/battery needn't be useful for everyone in every circumstance to sell well, just useful enough for enough people to buy it. I can't go 600 miles in a day on my bicycle, but I still use it daily.

    I live in Great Britain, so the furthest I could drive without meeting water is 837 miles (and the only people doing that trip are cyclists, it's a traditional route for obvious reasons). The furthest I've ever driven in one go is ~400 miles from ~Birmingham to the Scottish Highlands. If I'm travelling alone, a train is my preferred way to go (because of comfort and cost), with more people the car gets less comfortable but cheaper.

    In continental Europe water doesn't get in the way, but still most people won't drive much more than 500 miles at a time for a bi-annual holiday.

  11. Do you realize how inefficient car engines are? by PMBjornerud · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What will happen on the demand side of electricity when electric cars become common? Could it be that demand will quickly outgrow supply? What, oh what, will a KWH cost then? DIE, ELECTRIC CAR, DIE

    I don't think you understand how utterly inefficient a car engine is at converting gasoline into movement.

    Basically, you could build gasoline power plant and run electric cars off the output. You'd power more cars and reduce kWh cost.

    BTW: Oil is non-renewable, which means demand is guaranteed to outgrow supply.

    --
    I lost my sig.