Automotive: growth of giants of the German premium marks the step

Even German sedans can sometimes miss things. While sales of Audi, BMW and Mercedes have soared since 2010 and the magical trio continues to accumulate records, the pace of their growth has slowed in recent months, according to the latest data firm Jato Dynamics. In the first half, the global volumes of Mercedes, the current… Continue reading Automotive: growth of giants of the German premium marks the step

Coventry taxi drivers offered funding support for EV switch

Coventry taxi drivers offered funding support for EV switch | Cab Trade News Javascript must be enabled for the correct page display Skip to Content Comments are closed. Subscribe2 We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that… Continue reading Coventry taxi drivers offered funding support for EV switch

  Fireproof Lithium-Ion Batteries That Harden When Hit 22 Aug

Gabriel Veith

Adding powdered silica (in blue container) to the plastic layer (white sheet) that separates electrodes inside a test battery (gold bag) will prevent lithium-ion battery fires.

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To make lithium-ion batteries safer, researchers have come up with a novel solution: a liquid electrolyte that becomes solid on impact. The electrolyte could keep batteries from heating up and bursting into flames when they are in a car crash or take a hard fall. And it could be cost-effectively and easily employed in today’s battery production lines, its developers say.

Lithium-ion battery cells contain two electrodes separated by a thin plastic sheet and submerged in a liquid electrolyte. If the plastic separator breaks, the electrodes can “touch” each other, shorting the battery and heating it up, which could cause the volatile liquid electrolyte to ignite.

For years, researchers have been trying to make batteries safer with nonflammable solid electrolytes. But these solids, typically plastics or ceramics, don’t conduct ions as well as their liquid counterparts. Some groups are also making batteries with paste-like semi-solid electrolytes and glassy electrolytes.

Gabriel Veith and his colleagues at Oak Ridge National Laboratory instead made an electrolyte that is normally a liquid but becomes solid when subjected to strain. So if a battery is crushed or penetrated, the electrolyte would harden, keeping the electrodes from coming in contact. The researchers are presenting their work at the American Chemical Society’s meeting in Boston.

The recipe for the electrolyte is straightforward. Veith was inspired by materials known as shear-thickening fluids. A simple example is a suspension of corn starch and water, known in kid circles as oobleck. When you hit oobleck with some force, it thickens and feels hard because the cornstarch particles come together.

Veith and his colleagues added 200-nanometer-wide silica particles to a conventional liquid electrolyte, which is a dilute solution of lithium salts. The silica nanoparticles come together in the new electrolyte and make it a hard solid, not just a thick liquid. The key to the behavior is controlling the size of the nanoparticles. “We find that particle sizes have to be very, very uniform,” Veith says. “We’re talking plus or minus a nanometer.” The researchers turn out nearly identical particles using a highly controlled chemical process known as the Stöber method.

The material remains solid as long as the battery is under strain, he says. And as an added bonus, silica also absorbs heat, so the electrolyte does not catch fire as easily.

In the lab, batteries tested with the new solidifying electrolyte behave roughly the same as those filled with liquid. The silica nanoparticles do reduce the electrolyte’s ability to conduct ions, which reduces the battery’s capacity and slows down charging. The capacity of a battery is measured in C rates, where 1C is the ability of a battery to charge or discharge in 1 hour, and 2C is charging in 30 minutes. “Our battery works well at rates of up to 2C, which is okay for most electronics,” Veith says.

As opposed to switching to solid electrolytes, the silica-laced electrolyte could be incorporated into current battery manufacturing processes. It would require first loading the plastic separator with silica nanoparticles and injecting the liquid electrolyte into a prepared cell. The silica would then diffuse into the electrolyte. “It’s a drop-in tech rather than revamping your production lines,” Veith says.

VW floods German market ahead of tougher emissions rules

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) hiked the number of passenger cars registered for road use with the authorities by 46.2 percent in Germany last month, lifting German passenger car registrations by 24.7 percent in August, statistics from the KBA German vehicle authority showed. FILE PHOTO: A Volkswagen logo is pictured at Volkswagen’s headquarters in Wolfsburg,… Continue reading VW floods German market ahead of tougher emissions rules

Toyota is investing $500 million in Uber at a valuation reported at $72 billion

Toyota reportedly set to invest $500 million in Uber at a valuation of $72 billion
5:23 PM ET Mon, 27 Aug 2018 | 00:51

Toyota is investing $500 million investment in ride-hailing giant Uber in a bid to accelerate autonomous ride-sharing, the companies announced on Monday afternoon.

The investment values Uber, one of the world's most valuable privately held companies, at $72 billion, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal. That's a significant jump from Uber's most recently stated valuation of $62 billion, based on a self-reported tender offer at the end of the first quarter. The company lost $659 million last quarter, marking a wider loss than its first-quarter figure, according to its own report.

Under the deal, the companies will incorporate self-driving technology into vehicles based on Toyota's Sienna minivans, and the companies plan to begin piloting the program in 2021, they said. Toyota has dubbed the platform “Autono-MaaS,” standing for “autonomous mobility as a service.”

In June, Toyota invested $1 billion in Southeast Asian Uber-rival Grab.

Waylands Automotive acquires Volvo Cars Swindon

Waylands Automotive has acquired Volvo Cars Swindon, its third Volvo business. The group was created in November 2017 with the purchase of Volvo Cars Reading, followed by the acquisition of Fawcetts Volvo , Newbury in May 2018. The group is led by John O Hanlon (pictured), who headed up Ridgeway before it was bought by… Continue reading Waylands Automotive acquires Volvo Cars Swindon

Tesla is a ‘hope stock’ that is ‘just not real,’ fund manager says

Toyota investing $500 million in Uber to roll out a self-driving fleet
3:58 AM ET Tue, 28 Aug 2018 | 03:42

Tesla is a “hope stock” with little chance of success in the car-manufacturing industry, a fund manager told CNBC on Tuesday.

“Are we living in the real world?” Tesla is just another one of those hope stocks,” Peter Toogood, chief investment officer at The Embark Group, said on CNBC's “Squawk Box Europe.”

Tesla's share price took a nosedive Monday after the company's Chief Executive Elon Musk abruptly halted plans to take the firm private.

Musk had shocked investors on August 7 by announcing his aim to remove Tesla from the stock market at $420 per share. The firm's shares have shed almost 16 percent off their value since.

Days after that initial announcement, Musk said that Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund had approached him “multiple times” about taking the firm off the public market, lifting hopes that Tesla could raise some much-needed cash to help its drive toward profitability. Such hopes of a Saudi deal have waned since Musk's U-turn on taking Tesla private.

Joshua Lott | Getty Images
Elon Musk

Despite Toogood's bearish thoughts on Tesla's auto manufacturing abilities, the analyst said there was “hope” for the firm in its self-driving technology.

“The only bit that has got hope is the autonomous driving,” Toogood said, adding, “(but) the idea to compete on a platform basis with cars; it's losing money every time it sells one.”

The investment manager said that the lack of a network for servicing Tesla cars was also a point of concern. Some international customers, for instance, have bemoaned repair waiting times, as parts need to be shipped from overseas.

“He's losing money every time he sells a car today, and he can't service them,” Toogood said. “Ask Norway, they can't actually get the car serviced because there's no network to service them. It's just not real.”

Norway is considered an electric vehicle-friendly country due to subsidies aimed at improving affordability and an overall target of going all-electric by 2025.

“Tesla continues to be a transformational company, especially on Model 3 production and demand,” Daniel Ives, chief strategy officer and head of technology research at GBH Insights, told CNBC in an email Tuesday.

“However, this last month has been a nightmare for Tesla bulls and the Street continues to put the company in the investor penalty box, given all the uncertainty surrounding the name in the near-term with the going-private fiasco front and center. At this point there are more questions than answers on Tesla.”

Tesla's stock price target was cut by a number of brokers on Monday and Tuesday, including CFRA, Independent Research and Canaccord Genuity.

Musk is the largest investor in Tesla, owning almost a fifth of the company's shares. Market observers have expressed worries over his leadership, citing the executive's presence on Twitter, involvement in public issues and general disdain for the media as causes for concern.