Publish Time: 2022-03-25 Origin: Site
Recently, Toyota's chief scientist confirmed that, Toyota new vehicle with a solid-state battery will be launched in the mid-2020s, and the new technology will initially debut in a hybrid vehicle.
The batteries, which are expected to be commercialized in 2025, will be install in hybrids, since they allows for a smaller battery pack that is less cost-sensitive hybrid car, Toyota chief scientist Gill Pratt said.
Hybrids also represent a "more rigorous test" of solid-state technology, Platt said, because of the higher battery cycle count inherent in this use case. As Toyota gains more experience with solid-state batteries and costs fall, the automaker will expand its use to fully electric vehicles, he said.
Greater energy density is one of the purported benefits of solid-state batteries, but Pratt said reduce the charging time of hybrid vehicle will be the issues which Toyota is also hoping to solve. That hasn't been confirmed, as development work is currently focused on solid-state batteries' hybrid rollout, he noted. Quicker charging will also require upgrades to the grid and charging network, he said.
Pratt didn't confirm which model will get solid-state batteries, but the tech could help reinvigorate the hybrid that started it all.
Toyota plans to build, but these will be initially for hybrids. Will solid-state cells become part of those plans—perhaps as part of Prime plug-in hybrids with even better mpg?
TOHOP's research shows that solid-state batteries are still a long way from commercialization and will not affect the development of liquid NiMH batteries in the short run, and no matter when Toyota's plan put into production, hybrids will still be a core role in the Autocar market.