NiMH vs Li-Ion battery - what's the deal?

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Technical Discussion' started by pakitt, Apr 6, 2016.

  1. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    BMW 318i here has just lost a cylinder - now 3, and 1.5 litre. With turbo, and 100kw.
     
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  2. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Same one in the MINI I think.
     
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  3. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    Mini pretty popular in Germany too. Very expensive to buy, apparently fun to drive, very very expensive to maintain......
    And that when the oil light comes up once and then never again and your engine is destroyed and they tell you it is your fault although you have had servicing it at BMW as told....
     
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  4. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    A colleague with the first gen Cooper S seemed to be coming to work with a different car every few months. At one point, it couldn't even stay on. It would stall 5-10 seconds after start up. Finally got rid of it and bought a Lexus.
     
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  5. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),24 Venza Limit,B52-D,G,F,H

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    Don't see an answer yet. Does the battery range stay the same? Too many variables. Just assumed the Lithium was better.
     
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  6. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    TOYOTA says:
    "The hybrid battery is an interesting example of how we have been able to improve performance. Like before, it uses nickel-metal hydride technology, which we know suits the Prius’ global market needs, but we’ve made it more compact, yet at the same time more powerful, faster charging and longer lasting." in their document "THE NEW TOYOTA PRIUS -THE REBIRTH OF THE PIONEER" dated 08 Feb 2016 on Toyota's EU website.

    Interestingly enough, they don't mention Lithium Ion at all in the document - targeted publicity? I thought that NiMH has a higher energy density, at least in smaller scale domestic situations, and is more tolerant of deep discharge than Lithium Ion. Toyota must have a reason, though - it could purely marketing, that the 2 largest markets (Japan and USA) get the lighter weight battery?
     
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  7. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    I am more and more led to believe that the 2 batteries perform exactly the same, but Li-Ion is marketed in those markets where customers care to know what they have in their car. Even if it makes no difference.

    And I also assume that the lighter Li-Ion manages to achieve, albeit at higher cost, which is offset on cars with trims missing many standard features in EU offerings (e.g. safety package is standard in all trims in Germany and Italy, and likely elsewhere in EU), a better MPG rating in the EPA cycle (where the car is moving, right?), whereas the EU cycle (car is not moving but on a test bench during test), already shows big benefits, with a slightly heavier (7kg/15 pounds difference, right?), but way cheaper (?) battery. And offer instead a standard more complete trim by default (the base trim in Germany really has already a LOT of stuff in it and the safety package).

    If the 2 versions offer different performance, I'd really like a test of 2 versions, with as much a similar weight as possible, to see what is the performance difference, if any.

    As for quality, they are selling Li-Ion on the Prius V/+/Alpha in EU (7 seats) in EU since a few years, and I am not aware of any issues. In the USA the Prius v is sold with NiMH version only, essentially a reversed situation compared to regular Prius Gen4 now. So from the looks of it, for a full hybrid, using the latest gen NiMH or a Li-Ion I think it makes no difference at all - only cost (for Toyota) and marketing to make it sound better and more modern - because NiMH is so 90s :D
     
    #27 pakitt, Apr 11, 2016
    Last edited: Apr 11, 2016
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  8. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    That's interesting, in Australia as well, our Prius v has Li-Ion only on both models (Gen 3 and Gen 4 are NiMH only).

    It would also be interesting to know the difference in price if either battery fails - anyone have any idea?
     
  9. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Nope...I've been asking here if anyone knows the price of a Prius +v Li batt in EU?
    We know in the USA the Prius NiMH runs around $2250 without install.

    I have also asked the question if we think Toyota would replace in kind (eg; for Gen4) or would they switch over to NiMH for replacement.
     
    #29 wjtracy, Apr 11, 2016
    Last edited: Apr 11, 2016
  10. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    I'd be surprised if they were entirely compatible - seeing they have different energy densities and deep discharge profiles, and may therefore have differing software and even inverters, as well as different installations and cooling ducting.
     
  11. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I think it's weight. Is a moonroof available anywhere in Europe? I'm wondering what options are left out because of the NiMH as opposed to Li-Ion.
     
  12. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    No moonroof available in Germany and Italy.
     
  13. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    I could be wrong, but there is no mention of Sunroof or Moonroof in Australian brochure either.
     
  14. Geo13647

    Geo13647 Junior Member

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    No moonroof or power seats in the UK. Think the Excel (top trim) has everything else tho' except LiPO HV battery, all models have NiMh chemistry. G...
     
  15. Sillywizard

    Sillywizard Junior Member

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    No sun/moon roof.
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    Only NiMh-battery.
     
  16. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),24 Venza Limit,B52-D,G,F,H

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    I don't miss my sunroof in my solar four. The ceiling in the car is actually cooler in the 2016 plus it should never leak.
     
  17. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    #37 bwilson4web, Apr 12, 2016
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2016
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  18. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    An interesting abstract: Metal hydride electrodes: The importance of surface area

    Abstract

    A large active specific surface area is a very efficient way to improve charge/discharge rate capabilities of metal hydride electrodes. This can be promoted by washing oxidized, pre-hydrided AB5 alloy particles in a hot KOH solution. This leads to magnetization of the alloy powder, making it possible to lift the powder with a simple permanent magnet, indicating that nickel liberated in the surface layer is essential for the improved kinetics.

    The overpotential of each step in the discharge process is analysed in detail using both half cells and sealed cells. The electrode polarisation depends inversely on the current density per active area. Untreated and treated alloy powders have similar current densities per active area, but treated powder exhibits superior kinetics due to its larger surface area. A NiMH cell with a surface-treated alloy has very good rate capability, only limited by the kinetics of the Ni electrode.

    At low overpotential, the electrochemical reaction gives the main contribution to the electrode polarisation. If the discharge current is increased to give an overpotential of more than 0.1 V, concentration polarisation will become important and a limiting factor at high current densities.

    Bob Wilson

     
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  19. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    I thought this related recent thread was quite interesting:
    Who has got a Plug-in kit? Satisifed? | PriusChat

    In Colorado you can convert a regular Prius into a plug-in with Li batts. But it'll cost you $10,000 for a 4 kWhr Li batt like PiP1 ($4000 after Colorado rebate which is not bad if you happen to live in CO).
     
  20. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    A 23 page summary of how we got here from there. It is written in academic style which can be daunting. Regardless, there are gems in the paper: http://hsns.ucpress.edu/content/ucphsns/46/1/44.full.pdf

    The protracted commercialization of battery electric passenger vehicles is often
    ascribed to the failure of the automobile industry to embrace the latest power
    sources. In this article, I argue that the pace of progress in this context was instead
    dictated largely by the ways researchers constructed metrics of power source per-
    formance. , , ,

    Both popular and scholarly accounts tend to ascribe the long gestation of the
    modern electric passenger vehicle to the dilatory tactics of auto manufacturers,
    a sector often cast as a holdover from the golden age of heavy manufacturing. If
    the conspiratorial predilections of automakers have perhaps been overstated,
    this industry’s antipathy and coordinated resistance to technology-forcing
    legislation, above all, the California Air Resources Board’s Zero Emission
    Vehicle mandate, have been well documented.1 One industry tactic, theorized
    the historian David A. Kirsch in 2000, was to conjure an imaginary super
    battery as a way of indefinitely delaying commercial production of electric
    vehicles.
    . . .
    an extended-range electric vehicle, the Volt was essentially a dual-mode hybrid
    utilizing a large and powerful battery. Whereas Tesla Motors equipped its
    Roadster with packs of lithium cobalt oxide electronics commodity cells, an
    expensive and problematic application of this technology, GM wanted a lith-
    ium battery pack designed expressly for electric traction.

    Once again, the company had to rely on external expertise. The results fell
    far short of expectations, in large measure due to the impulse to make perfec-
    tion the enemy of the good.
    . . .

    Automakers had united in arguing for super batteries as the
    necessary condition for super-electric vehicles, convincing CARB to roll back
    the ZEV mandate in exchange for research and development commitments.
    Unlike their American counterparts, however, Japanese automakers opened
    a lucrative market for hybrids equipped with the less-than-super NiMH
    battery, a system that combined reasonably high energy density and modest
    lifespan with low cost and excellent safety.

    Bob Wilson
     
    #40 bwilson4web, Apr 12, 2016
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2016
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