Posatronic
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2017
- Messages
- 62
michael said:I found an interesting study
http://www.myrav4ev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=561&p=13780&hilit=battery+fade#p13780
published on the Rav 4 EV forum.
The author purchased Panasonic cells similar or possibly identical to those used by Tesla, which are presumably also the same or similar to those used in your Mercedes.
He tested the cells in isolation, at room temperature, and subjected them to cycling equivalent to approximately 90K miles. He said this took "many months"
In his tests, fade was about 10% at 90K miles. However, these were at moderate temperatures, and they involved primarily cycling fade, not calendar fade. Typically, a 100K mile car would need 6 to 10 years, depending on usage.
If his tests are indicative, it tends to dispute the often quoted Tesla owner report that suggests about 10% per 100K miles, even with temperature and calendar effects.
Another interesting study
http://jes.ecsdl.org/content/164/1/A6066.full#F6
From the Journal of the Electrochemical Society looks at calendar fade in NCA batteries, similar to those used by Tesla. they basically charged up cells to various states of charge and stored them, at various temperatures, for 9 months. They then measured the battery capacity when fully charged.
Look in particular at Figure 8. It shows, as expected, greater fade at higher storage temperatures and states of charge. But below about 55% SOC, fade is very low and almost independent of SOC. Above 55 %, there is a step increase in fade rate, and the fade increases with higher and higher SOC.
This study gives results which are consistent with an earlier Army study which showed that the cells lasted better when cycled between 0% and 50% compared to cells cycled between 25% and 75% or between 50% and 100%. Many people believe that "mid level" is best for the batteries, but these two studies refute that belief. Lower is better than midway.
Hey first of all, great finds. I like all that data.
Second your interpretation of figure 8 seems a little off.
You should throw out 50c. But would like to see 12.5c, more realistic temptures with battery conditioning.
So looking at just 25c(ideal temp) biggest loss at first is 0-10%. Little more 10-20% then it levels off to 55% for all 4 lines. Then from 55-65 is the step your looking at and goes down and tapers off about level the rest of the way out. At 55% for average of all 4 lines at 25c is dropping .025 capacity. That seems very small. And does not suggest way lower
Than 50% is best. It looks like mid way is just fine, not a big enough difference to leave at 0 SOC. It's such a small difference that then I'd point(55% SOC) is just fine. Then the second big step after 0-10% is 55-65~.
So to me this says having the battery at approximately 55% is just fine and then having the car charged up right before you use the car seems to be the best. So in reality then setting in he Bolt for charging to 40% right away then charge the rest of the way just before you leave seems pretty accurate. ( assuming and based on others peoples "testing" of battery that the battery is bigger then 60kwh like 66-70)
Also if you add that the Prius uses their battery from 60-80% and have one of the best track record for their battery's. ( extremely low replacement of their batteries going bad)
The mid point, to stay charged , seeems very reasonable based on reasearch and then charge right before you leave.
Even the worst 25 c line after 9.6 months is only .05.
If you find more studies I would love to read them. I like to see lots of data.