Leave behind Battery Exchanging: Tesla Aims to Charge Electrical Cars in Five Minutes – MIT Technology Review

Leave behind Battery Exchanging: Tesla Aims to Charge Electrical Cars in Five Minutes

  • by Kevin Bullis
  • July 16, 2013

Electrified vehicles take too long to recharge to be practical for most consumers.

Electrified vehicles take too long to recharge. To charge a Tesla Model S just halfway takes five hours at a typical home or public charging station. But in its effort to make electrical vehicles more practical, Tesla Motors is quickly reducing the charging times. Last September, it unveiled a network of “supercharging” stations—designed exclusively for its Model S and future electrified vehicles—that could charge a battery halfway in thirty minutes. In May, it announced an upgrade that cut that time to twenty minutes. Now Tesla’s chief technology officer, JB Straubel, says the company eventually could cut the time it takes to fully charge the battery to just five minutes—or not much longer than it takes to pack a gas tank.

Swifter service: A Tesla charging station in Hawthorne, California.

Straubel isn’t referring to the battery interchange technology Tesla recently unveiled (see “Why Tesla Thinks It Can Make Battery Exchanging Work”). That system doesn’t charge batteries quickly. It simply takes out a depleted battery and substitutes it with a fully charged one. He’s talking about what might be a more appealing option for drivers: recharging the battery in your car while you wait.

“It’s not going to happen in a year from now. It’s going to be hard. But I think we can get down to five to ten minutes,” Straubel said in an interview with MIT Technology Review. He noted that the current superchargers, which produce one hundred twenty kilowatts of electric current, “seemed pretty crazy even ten years ago.” Conventional public charging stations produce well under ten kilowatts.

Tesla is far ahead of its competition with its supercharging technology. For example, the most popular fast-charging technology today is based on the Japanese Chademo standard, which enables 50-kilowatt charging. Even SAE International’s brand-new fast-charging standard, which was finalized in October and is being adopted by major automakers such as GM, tops out at one hundred kilowatts.

One reason Tesla has shoved the technology so aggressively is that its battery packs store more than three times the energy of its competitors’ electric-car batteries. As a result, they require more power to charge quickly, says Arindam Maitra, a senior project manager at the Electrical Power Research Institute.

Straubel says Tesla has been able to rapidly improve charging because it designs and builds all of the key components itself, including the chargers, the electronics for monitoring the battery pack, and a cooling system for the battery. They’re all optimized to work together in a way that’s not effortless for systems built to accommodate many different models of electrified vehicles.

If an electrical car is plugged directly into a wall socket, on-board chargers take AC power from the wall, convert it to DC, and regulate the power delivered to the battery. Quick charging or supercharging bypasses the onboard charger; the AC-to-DC conversion happens outside the vehicle.

One challenge of prompt charging is that delivering power to a battery very rapidly can cause it to overheat. To avoid bruising the battery, the outside charger needs to communicate with the electronics that monitor the state of the batteries, including their voltage and temperature, and quickly adjust charging rates accordingly. “To do that kind of charging, everything has to be designed and working in flawless synchrony,” Straubel says.

Achieving five-minute charges will require not only further improving the charging system, but also improving the interface with the electrical grid. As it is, only some places on the grid can treat 120-kilowatt charging. Drawing large amounts of power from the grid also incurs request charges from the utility, enhancing the cost of the system.

But Straubel says that Tesla plans to get around these problems by equipping supercharging stations with solar panels and batteries.

Storing solar power in batteries in the charging station could also be helpful to operators of the power grid (see “Wind Turbines, Battery Included, Can Keep Power Supplies Stable”). They could provide utilities a way to moderate fluctuations on the grid, something that’s becoming more significant as more intermittent sources of power, such as solar and wind, are added. Tesla plans to test such a system soon in California. It could charge utilities for this service, which, Straubel says, could help offset the cost of the stations.

Even tho’ these fast-charging breakthroughs would be useful only on Tesla’s cars, they still could be significant for expanding the EV market. Tesla plans to introduce cars in the $30,000 to $35,000 range in the next few years.

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