- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4140
|
|
Title: HPR4140: Battery and Charging Technology 2024
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4140/hpr4140.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 20:07:45
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,140 for Friday the 14th of June 2024.
|
|
Today's show is entitled Battery in Charging Technology 2024.
|
|
It is hosted by Ahuka and is about 16 minutes long.
|
|
It carries a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is, interesting new developments in batteries and charging.
|
|
Hello, this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio and welcoming you to another exciting episode.
|
|
And what I want to do today is I want to talk about a technology thing that I find very
|
|
interesting.
|
|
And that has to do with the developments in battery and charging technology.
|
|
I started looking into all of this for the reason that the car that I'm driving now,
|
|
although it is doing very nicely, is a 2012.
|
|
It has about 250,000 miles on it.
|
|
It is still running just fine.
|
|
I get really good gas mileage, but I have already decided that my next car is going to be
|
|
either an electric vehicle or a hybrid vehicle.
|
|
It's going to be one or the other.
|
|
It's just a question of where are we going to be at the point that I need to make that
|
|
change.
|
|
Now, a lot of that depends on battery and charging technology.
|
|
So I started looking into it and I thought I would share with you some of the stuff
|
|
that I've been seeing that I think is some interesting developments.
|
|
If they come along fast enough, I may go for an electric vehicle.
|
|
If they're still lagging a little bit, I'll probably go for a hybrid.
|
|
So that's kind of what I'm looking at.
|
|
Now, I think I'm just going to say, I think it should be obvious to nearly everyone that
|
|
we need to stop burning fossil fuels.
|
|
Well, that's all well and good.
|
|
What do we replace it with?
|
|
We can have renewable energy sources that can provide electricity to run our vehicles and
|
|
power our homes.
|
|
But those energy sources tend to be intermittent.
|
|
The sun only shines half the day, winds come and go, and the key technology we need to
|
|
bridge the gap is battery technology.
|
|
When we talk about vehicles in particular, you have to have good battery technology to
|
|
run automobiles.
|
|
No question about that.
|
|
Now, fortunately, there have been some important developments that provide good news on this
|
|
front.
|
|
Unless this comes from China.
|
|
Now, China has no oil resources of its own and is therefore incentivized to push research
|
|
into alternatives.
|
|
When you understand that China has to import virtually all of the oil, it has pretty much
|
|
every foreign policy problem involving China starts to become really focused.
|
|
You can see that providing and securing the supply of oil that they need drives everything
|
|
that China does.
|
|
Now another country that's in a similar situation with no domestic oil supply is Japan, which
|
|
also has the same incentives and has also done good work in this area.
|
|
Now the United States, in contrast, is a major oil producer.
|
|
And so it has no incentive, in that sense, not anything like China and Japan, to get
|
|
into looking for alternatives.
|
|
And in fact, there's a lot of opposition, what we are seeing now in the United States.
|
|
We are seeing that various states, localities, etc., are actively hostile to any kind of alternative
|
|
energy.
|
|
The federal government is spending lots of money subsidizing fossil fuels.
|
|
And so we've got kind of a problem there, but the thing is, I think we're going to be pushed
|
|
whether we like it or not into making some changes.
|
|
Now in terms of automobiles, that's the big thing because so much of our fossil fuel
|
|
use is for automobiles.
|
|
And what we're seeing, and these are just the facts, the share of new vehicles that our
|
|
electric goes up each year.
|
|
And they will be the largest share of new vehicles sooner than many people realize.
|
|
Now some countries are getting there faster than others.
|
|
Interesting one of them, Norway, is in fact an oil producer.
|
|
Well, they're producing oil, but they're selling it to other people.
|
|
In 2023, Norway had 90% of their sales be electric vehicles in the first half of the year.
|
|
Now that includes both pure electric and hybrid electric.
|
|
So there's, you know, with hybrid vehicles, there is gas usage.
|
|
It's just tends to be less.
|
|
So comparable figure in Germany was 35% in China, 33%.
|
|
And when you say China, 33%, you know, bear in mind, China is, I think at this point,
|
|
possibly the second most populous country in the world, I think India just overtook them.
|
|
Now, I've got a link in the show notes, you can see some more about how different countries
|
|
are doing with all of this, and also how the US is doing.
|
|
Now, other news notes, California and Washington, two states of the United States, have mandated
|
|
that 100% of new vehicles will be electric by 2035, that's just 11 years away.
|
|
New Jersey has a similar mandate.
|
|
I would not be at all surprised to see other states join in this.
|
|
Now the main obstacle to increase the adoption of electric vehicles is what we call range
|
|
anxiety.
|
|
For example, most electric cars right now have about a 300 mile top range on a full charge.
|
|
And a full charge can take up to an hour at a time.
|
|
Now I do a trip each year from my home in Michigan to the rest of my family in New England.
|
|
It's my family and my wife's family, we met and got married there.
|
|
So we go there every summer to visit and see people, and that's about 800 mile trip.
|
|
Well that would mean stopping at least twice, going each way for up to an hour for a recharge.
|
|
Now the solution has to be some combination of higher capacity batteries and quicker
|
|
recharging times.
|
|
Now fortunately there is progress on both of these fronts.
|
|
Now first I'm going to point to, there's a company called Contemporary Amperex Technology
|
|
Company Limited, abbreviation CATL.
|
|
This is a Chinese company, it is the largest battery manufacturer in the world.
|
|
For that reason there are accusations in the US that they are a security concern, but
|
|
the rest of the world is not likely to worry too much about that.
|
|
What they have done technically is to improve the capacity and charging times of their batteries
|
|
significantly.
|
|
They are now shipping batteries that power a car for 400 kilometers, which is about 250
|
|
miles, on just a 10 minute charge.
|
|
So for my trip each year I would spend 30 minutes recharging instead of two hours.
|
|
That starts to look like a feasible plan.
|
|
Or with a full charge it could go 700 kilometers, which is about 435 miles.
|
|
So I could get a full charge before leaving home, do a couple of 10 minute charges on the
|
|
way and be there with power to spare.
|
|
That's totally doable.
|
|
You know, my wife and I are senior citizens.
|
|
I can assure you we spend more time than that in the bathrooms as we go.
|
|
These batteries are fairly conventional as rechargeables go, being lithium-iron phosphate.
|
|
If you start reading literature you will often see that abbreviated LIP and that is the chemistry
|
|
they use.
|
|
That is the standard now.
|
|
lithium-iron phosphate is safer than the older lithium batteries.
|
|
But otherwise it is fairly for lithium conventional.
|
|
Now the next thing that we can look at in terms of battery technology is what is called solid
|
|
state batteries.
|
|
Now one of the leaders with this technology is Toyota.
|
|
Now Toyota was the early leader in hybrid vehicles.
|
|
But hybrid vehicles contain both a gasoline or petrol engine with batteries and electric
|
|
motors.
|
|
And because Toyota got off to an early start they probably have more automotive experience
|
|
with batteries than any manufacturer in the business, even though they are a bit later
|
|
to the fully electric vehicle market.
|
|
There is always a debate about hybrid versus fully electric.
|
|
At some point we are going to go to fully electric.
|
|
That is obvious.
|
|
But the question is when?
|
|
Now my suspicion is at some point there is going to be a very rapid shift.
|
|
Because that tends to be the way these things happen.
|
|
It is like we are not ready.
|
|
We are not ready.
|
|
We are not ready.
|
|
Suddenly yes we are ready.
|
|
Then things shift overnight.
|
|
Now the thing about solid state batteries, which is what Toyota is looking at, they can
|
|
avoid using lithium.
|
|
They will be lighter.
|
|
They will have a higher energy density.
|
|
Now because this is new technology, it probably won't appear in production for about three
|
|
or four years.
|
|
But Toyota claims they should be able to produce a car that will go 1200 kilometers or 750
|
|
miles on a 10 minute charge.
|
|
I put a link in the show notes.
|
|
You can take a look at Toyota's plans and see what they are looking at doing.
|
|
Now the main competition with Toyota in the hybrid market is Honda.
|
|
As I said, I have been researching this.
|
|
I have come to the conclusion that if you are going to get a hybrid vehicle, you want
|
|
to get either a Toyota or a Honda, there is like no one else comes close.
|
|
So Honda is Toyota's main competitor.
|
|
They also have their plans for solid state batteries.
|
|
Again, there is a link in the show notes.
|
|
Now there is a Chinese manufacturer NIO that has a semi solid state battery right now that
|
|
can go 650 miles or just over a thousand kilometers on a single charge.
|
|
Now, it's worth noting that the idea of solid state batteries is not all that new as Michael
|
|
Faraday first discovered them in the early 19th century.
|
|
What's new is the technology to scale up the batteries into something that can power an
|
|
automobile.
|
|
Now, I've put a few things in the notes.
|
|
If you want to learn more about solid state batteries, first is an explanation from Harvard
|
|
University School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and then there is one from New
|
|
Scientist Magazine and a Wikipedia article.
|
|
All of these links are in the show notes.
|
|
Now there are other technologies.
|
|
BYD is a Chinese company that is the world's largest producer of electric vehicles.
|
|
Now they employ a technology that is called the Blade Battery.
|
|
This is a variation on the lithium iron phosphate technology, but the company claims it is
|
|
safer as a longer range and a longer lifetime.
|
|
Again, link in the show notes if you want to read more about blade batteries.
|
|
Sodium ion batteries are a coming thing as well.
|
|
Now this is not surprising since sodium and lithium are in the same chemical family, both
|
|
being alkali metals, so they should have similar properties.
|
|
But one advantage of sodium is that it is a lot more abundant.
|
|
Lithium is fairly rare and so there are concerns about whether a handful of countries could
|
|
tie up the lithium supply.
|
|
No one is going to do that with sodium.
|
|
So sodium ion batteries should cost less and unlike lithium produce no toxic byproducts.
|
|
There is a Swedish company called NorthVolt that has made great progress in this area and
|
|
I put a link to an article from the Guardian that is in the show notes that will give you
|
|
more information about that.
|
|
The biggest problem is the lack of infrastructure around battery recharging and that in my opinion
|
|
is where there is a good role for the government.
|
|
In the US, which I am most familiar with, the government has in the past intervened to promote
|
|
transportation innovations and in 19th century it was the promotion of railroads, which the
|
|
government aided through substantial land grants, and in the 20th century it was building
|
|
the road network.
|
|
Those things would not have happened if the government had not made those investments.
|
|
I would suggest that there is a need now to build out charging infrastructure at a speed
|
|
and scale that the private sector cannot accomplish.
|
|
That would solve the last problem preventing widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
|
|
Companies are now producing or will be shortly the batteries we need.
|
|
Right now with my fuel-efficient car, it takes me two tanks of gas or petrol from my European
|
|
friends to make my trip each year, because I can go about 500 miles on a full tank.
|
|
We should, within the next few years, have batteries to exceed that range.
|
|
What we lack is the charging infrastructure to make recharging as easy as refueling is
|
|
now.
|
|
The obstacle is not technology, it's politics.
|
|
The other issue that should be concerned to some Americans, perhaps, is that all of
|
|
the leading work on these vital technologies is happening in other countries.
|
|
Now, I'm less concerned about that because the problems are global, but I find it odd
|
|
that some American politicians consider technology from China to be a security threat, yet
|
|
seem to have no interest in developing the technology here, that strikes me as rather
|
|
odd.
|
|
Well, anyway, that's enough on this topic.
|
|
This is Ahuka, signing off from Hacker Public Radio and as always encouraging you to support
|
|
free software.
|
|
Bye-bye.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio, does work.
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, click on our contribute link to find out how
|
|
easy it leads.
|
|
Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by Anonsthost.com, the Internet Archive and
|
|
OurSync.net.
|
|
On the Sadois status, today's show is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
|