Página 1 de 1

Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging tec

Enviado: 08 out 2011, 12:44
por ruimegas
Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging tech and new, highly formable ultra high tensile strength steel

Imagem

"Nissan has unveiled a couple of innovations, and the first is the development of a new technology that can fully charge an electric vehicle battery in about 10 minutes.
According to a report, researchers at Japan’s Kansai University, working together with Nissan boffins, have come up with tech to speed up the charging process. Currently, lithium-ion batteries can take up to eight hours to recharge fully.
In experiments, the researchers tweaked a capacitor – by using a composite made from tungsten oxide and vanadium oxide for the capacitor’s electrode instead of the usual carbon – to allow it to hold more power. Tests with the new capacitor resulted in it being able to fully recharge within 10 minutes, while maintaining nearly the same storage capacity and voltage as lithium-ion batteries, the report says.
Apparently, the new capacitor has endured repeated charging and discharging without durabiility issues, and the researchers are now planning to go further afield, utilising different materials and structures for the device, with the aim of bringing down the charge time to three minutes or less.
The report adds that it is likely to take about a decade to commercialise the technology, but the breakthrough is expected to help cut production costs for electric cars and make them more popular for drivers in a hurry.
The second one involves steel, in this case what has been tagged as the world’s first ultra high tensile strength steel to be rated at 1.2 gigapascals (GPa), which Nissan has developed in collaboration with Nippon Steel Corporation and Kobe Steel.
What’s unique about this one isn’t just its stiffness, but also its formability. Until now, high tensile strength steel involved a critical trade-off – increased strength came with increased rigidity, and with that, a consequent reduction in press formability, not to mention the challenges in spot-welding the stuff. Traditionally, only high tensile steel – rated up to 980 megapascals (MPa) – has been used in cold pressing structural body parts, requiring complex press work.
The new material changes the scene. Highly formable, it will be produced from 2013 as steel plates for use in cold pressing structural body parts, and used for centre pillar reinforcements, front and side roof rails and other key structural components.
Development of the new material was realised by a breakthrough in the ability to control its structural formation at the sub-micron level, combining hard and soft layers to achieve both strength and formability. An optimal spot-welding methodology – a proprietary process which involves careful optimisation of welding pressure, current volume and power distribution – was also developed for use with it.
The steel offers the benefit of exceeding the structural body performance of previous materials, with less thickness needed. As such, it will offer weight savings, with Nissan claiming its use will reduce vehicle body weight by up to 15 kg."

Em: http://paultan.org/2011/10/06/nissan-an ... gth-steel/

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 08 out 2011, 14:32
por RJSC
Continuo é a não perceber isto:
The report adds that it is likely to take about a decade to commercialise the technology
Mas se a tecnologia já está a funcinar porque tanto tempo? Em 10 anos ainda alguém com vontade mete no mercado outra inovação que apareça mais tarde.

Depois de a tecnologia estar a funcionar, não devem ser precisos mais de 2 ou 3 anos para montar uma linha de produção. :roll:

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 08 out 2011, 20:33
por ruimegas
Concordo contigo...é imcompreensível :(

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 11 out 2011, 15:18
por ruimegas
A Ten-Minute Charger For The Nissan Leaf – In Time

Imagem

"One of the drawbacks of current (if you will) electric cars is the rather long time it takes to charge their batteries. We found with the Leaf that as long as you adapt your lifestyle to it a bit, it’s not a problem, but the unexpected happens and it would suck to be at low charge when you suddenly need to get to the hospital, or what have you. Quick-charge solutions are out there, but few are really practical and many still take hours to reach full charge. Nissan says they’ve created one, however, that could charge a car in only ten minutes.

It’s a collaboration with Kansai University in Japan, and the technology breakthrough has to do with the electrode material used, though it’s not clear where in the process the new vanadium oxide and tungsten oxide electrodes are being implemented.

The ten-minute charge uses a new compact charge station that costs less than half what the previous quick charger did, and could also be used on other automakers’ vehicles. Still, at around a million yen (~$13,000), it’s more suited to institutional use. Gas stations, parking lots, that sort of thing. It’s bad enough already that you have to get a 220V adapter in order to get your Leaf back on the road in good time.

The advanced processes and materials used mean that this isn’t likely to be found at your local shop any time soon, though. And of course there aren’t really enough electric vehicles out there to make this a priority just yet. But by doing the theoretical work now, Nissan can be ready with a product when the time is right."

Em: http://techcrunch.com/2011/10/10/a-ten- ... f-in-time/

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 11 out 2011, 18:44
por Filipe
Provávelmente será o meu próximo Leaf. 8-)

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 12 out 2011, 03:49
por mikexilva
Para quem não tenha reparado, o mais giro é que tem uma casa com rodas em cima do LEAF :)
[IMG]http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/autop ... -01-02.jpg[/IMG]

http://www.wired.com/autopia/2011/10/ni ... -the-leaf/


If you’re worried about natural disasters and energy dependence, Nissan’s got a car and a house to sell you in the most exclusive of communities.

The automaker is displaying the NSH-2012 (above) as the “Smart House” of the future at CEATEC Japan (Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies) 2011. It’s the centerpiece of Nissan’s Standalone Energy Community exhibit along with Smart Healthcare, Smart Cottage, Smart Rental Car and Smart Food Stand.

The house, inspired by both modern aircraft fuselage design and ancient Japanese homes, has a polyhedral structure that’s resistant to disasters, and there’s a Leaf EV at its heart.

Energy independence has taken on new significance and urgency in Japan since the Fukushima disaster, so each one of the buildings in the Energy Community relies on solar, fuel cell or wind power. Although the buildings are all designed to be self-sufficient, the Leaf is central to their existence as a community. Through the Leaf to Home charging system, the car acts as a battery backup if a solar system can’t generate enough power on a rainy day — or worse.

“This home can maintain stable in-house power supply that is not affected by weather, and can rely on solar power and power stored in an EV’s batteries if power is cut off during a disaster,” the company said.

When all is going well, a smart-grid setup funnels energy to and from individual power generation stations — and to and from plugged-in Leafs for low-emission charging.

Images: Nissan

Continue Reading “Nissan Builds a Post-Fukushima Neighborhood Around the Leaf” »

Re: Japan: Nissan unveils revolutionary car battery charging

Enviado: 12 out 2011, 09:17
por Filipe
Se for acessório do próximo modelo de Leaf, dá mesmo jeito lá para a horta do Alentejo. ;)