China develops revolutionary electric car battery that can charge in 10 minutes

Posted: May 18, 2024 by oldbrew in Batteries, innovation, net zero, News, Travel


If true, the rest of the EV scene looks obsolete already. Will other countries find themselves rolling out the red carpet for Chinese cars as their own motor industries struggle to survive?
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China has developed a revolutionary car battery that can charge in just 10 minutes and power a car for hundreds of miles before it needs to be plugged in, reports The Telegraph.

A report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) has hailed “remarkable” developments in chemistry that have allowed China to develop new batteries that pack far more energy than existing technologies.

The IEA highlighted EV batteries capable of travelling 250 miles without a recharge. Newer versions announced since the report was written can manage 600 miles.

However, the agency raised the alarm about China’s increasing dominance of the supply of vital materials needed to build batteries. The country’s stranglehold on supply chains means net zero rollouts globally could be disrupted by “extreme weather, trade disputes or geopolitics”.

The IEA’s Global Critical Minerals Outlook highlighted that Chinese battery company CATL had developed a fast-charging “Shenxing” battery “capable of delivering 400km of range from a ten-minute charge”. The battery is to be rolled out in electric vehicles later this year, the IEA said.

The report was written before CATL’s latest announcement last month, that it has developed a new battery, the Shenxing Plus, capable of ranges of 600 miles between recharges.

This means cars propelled by the new Chinese batteries would need refuelling far less often than most current EVs and at a fraction of the cost.

The report said China has made a series of breakthroughs in battery chemistry that put it far ahead of rivals in the West.

“One of the most remarkable developments in the global battery sector in the last five years has been the resurgence of the lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cathode chemistry,” it said.

This is a reference to innovations that removed the dead space in batteries, roughly doubling the energy density and so massively extending the range.

The breakthrough is likely to be cheered by drivers, who have long complained about “range anxiety” with EVs.

However, the IEA report warned that China has cornered much of the global market for the minerals vital to making batteries, a fact that will alarm many Western governments who are concerned about Beijing’s grip on the green energy market.

Full report here.
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Image credit: carsdirect.com

Comments
  1. jb says:

    Fast charging batteries have, since their first debut in the early 70s, always had a short life. And they never perform to the degree found in the press releases. There is still the EOL recycling issue, which if they announced a cheap solution might get some real interest.

  2. coecharlesdavid says:

    And where pray are the 1000amp supplies necessary to dump the charging energy required in 10 minutes?

  3. Bob Greene says:

    I used to see ads for magic treatments that allowed cars to run on water. This claim is right up there with those claims.

  4. Jimfrey says:

    I have been promised this super-duper, game-changing, technologically advanced, long-range, quick-charging, cheap, battery will be available “next year” (along with cold fusion, moon colonies, and global warming) for years; still waiting……

  5. brianrlcatt says:

    I await the road test. And the fires with even greater energy density. Also where do you charge them? 50KWh, a modest capacity and with a 200 mile range implicit in the energy deamnds, means a source that can deliver 300KW. 13,000 amps at 24V. An interesting rewiring project for majority of cars that live in car parks or on the street.

    Keep digging, guys.

    “The substation can no handle it, Captain, ye cannae change the laws of physics!” Unless you are a journalist or politician. Or Captain James T KIrk. When you know nothing, everything is possible. Oh that was science fiction, was it…..

  6. Curious George says:

    These fast chargers will be powered by huge diesel generators.

    Otherwise, it reads like a snake oil commercial.

  7. catweazle666 says:

    Where are the superconducting charger cables coming from?

  8. oldbrew says:

    Some tech blurb here…

    https://www.catl.com/en/news/6239.html

    And the spin…

    On its journey of continuous expansion of scientific frontiers and the utmost pursuit of a better life, CATL is ushering in a superfast charging era for new energy vehicles with a closed-loop supercharging ecosystem by integrating superfast charging battery, network, platform, and services.

  9. coecharlesdavid says:

    Has this latest blurb been written by AI?

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