Recent Updates

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

My Week In Cars: New Steve Cropley/Matt Prior podcast (ep.103)

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

New Vauxhall Frontera is sub-£24k with electric or petrol power

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

Autocar magazine 28 August: on sale now

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

Smart #5: brand's largest car yet rivals Enyaq with 348-mile range

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

Land Rover revives classic Defender V8 for £190,000

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

New MG ZS revealed as sub-£22k hybrid crossover

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

Electric Mercedes-Benz G-Class priced from £180,860

 

08/28/2024 12:00 PM

Hyundai hedges EV bets on range-extender powertrains

 

08/27/2024 12:00 PM

Electric Nissan GT-R primed for solid-state battery tech

 

08/27/2024 12:00 PM

Porsche predicts bigger role for e-fuels

<<    38   39   40   41   42   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 5614   Next >
Electric Nissan GT-R primed for solid-state battery tech
Tuesday, Aug 27, 2024 12:00 PM
Nissan Hyper Force Nissan sports car tipped to be first EV to use new battery tech in 2028

Solid-state batteries are the next big advance set to come from Nissan – and its future sports cars could be the models that benefit the most. 

The firm is currently developing a new pilot line for solid-state batteries at its facility in Yokohama, Japan, and its target is to launch series-production EVs using the technology by 2028.

These batteries have the potential to offer a significant technology leap for electric cars. Their greater density and more advanced technical make-ups enable much longer ranges and faster charging compared with today’s lithium ion packs.

Asked which sort of vehicles solid-state batteries will be used in, Ivan Espinosa, Nissan’s global vice-president of product planning, told Autocar: “You can imagine multiple things, because you can package as much energy in half the space. So you easily apply it to things like sports cars.”

Espinosa said he was “not ready to talk about costs” but did acknowledge that “initially, the cost might be high”. 

He added: “But as the technology matures, costs will go down. And because it has greater density, you need less material per battery in order to deliver the same amount of power, so the overall cost should be competitive.”

Solid-state batteries are likely to appear first in the production version of Nissan’s Hyper Force concept, the radical electric successor to the Nissan GT-R. 

The tightly packaged flagship would be the perfect car to introduce the technology, hinted Espinosa. 

“You can bring it to small cars, because it will be easier to package in a kei car, or maximise the cabin space in a big SUV,” he added.

< Prev    of 5614   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields