DONUT LAB Video #8 - More Energy & Less Weight?
TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE
Donut Lab test video number eight. How
much longer can I keep this up? I don't
not know, but apparently season one for
Donut Lab's Gen 1 battery is going to
get dragged out much more. Here's my
summary for the key claims they've made
and the test that they've shown us.
Energy density of 400 watt hours per
kilogram and long life were recently
called into question by a now former
employee of Nordic Nano. That's the
company tasked with the mass production
of the Donut Lab battery. Marko does not
address those allegations in this video
and given that this was an official
criminal complaint filed, I'm sure the
Donut lawyers told them don't not talk
about this. So, they did not. What they
did talk about is another application
for their batteries given their
tolerance for elevated temperature,
lightweight, not that we know the
weight, and fast charging, they offer
advantages in the popular two-wheel
electric scooter category. Before we get
into those details, shout-out to Paul
who in my video for Donut Lab's April
Fools video pointed out that the lady
who interrupts is a reference to Javier
Seldron Cool. I I know I botched that
name. He works at Santza Energy, which
is part of the Donut Lab battery origin
conspiracy theory. So, thank you for
giving that insight. Maybe in weeks or
months from now when more details are
revealed, this will all make sense.
Maybe or we're just getting trolled.
Back to the scooter battery, the
benchmark battery is from Yamaha, which
powers their Neos urban electric
e-scooter. We don't know the exact
chemistry, but it is lithium ion with a
liquid electrolyte. Volts times amps
equals watts, so it's nearly 1 kWh
battery. Yamaha makes scooters that use
either one or two of these removable
batteries. It weighs 7.9 kg, so we can
calculate the energy density at the pack
level. Donut apparently doesn't mind
shaming other batteries by disclosing
their weight. It calculates to 122 watt
hours per kilogram at the pack level. At
the cell number, that would be a higher
result because you're taking out the
housing, wiring, the weight of all the
other components from the calculation.
According to Yamaha, charging for that
swappable battery probably would be done
indoors. You remove the battery and plug
it in. Wall outlets are 220 to 240 volts
AC in the UK and in Europe. The charger
puts out 3 amps and that charges a pack
from 0 to 100% in 8 hours. There is no
DC fast charging option for these
swappable batteries and they are
air-cooled, not liquid-cooled. For this
video, Donut Lab took their own cells
and made an alternative swappable pack,
not a direct replacement, but something
that could be used in a similar way. At
this point in the video, I felt like
this is
This is
What? This is boring. But upon the
fourth viewing, there are some clues
here. To make the pack compatible,
they'd need to achieve about 50 volts.
They can achieve that by wiring in
series 14 of the solid-state batteries
we've been seeing over and over again
throughout this series. That would give
this a nominal capacity of 26 amp hours.
I know in the last video, Donut Lab said
they prefer to use maximum capacity and
voltage, but we have specs for nominal,
so that's what I'm going to use. In the
video, Ville said that the solution
would have 35% more energy storage and
yes, it would be 1.3 kWh. 50.4 volts
times 26 amp hours. You can clearly see
that size is smaller, too. They say they
they've achieved a 35% reduction in
size. That looks about right. That plus
the 35% higher energy storage means the
volumetric energy density at the pack
level is more than twice as good.
Volumetric energy density is not
something they bragged about at the
reveal of their solid-state battery, but
it's important, especially for bikes and
scooters. He also said that mass was
lower at the pack level, a 25%
reduction. So, that would take the
swappable battery pack down to about 6
kg. We have watt hours and we have mass
and therefore, we have gravimetric
energy density of 221 watt hours per
kilogram. Cool. That's an 81% increase
in energy density by weight over the
pack used by Yamaha. Most of that should
be attributed to the battery cells,
although there is also the possibility
that the pack case itself and the other
components are lighter in the prototype
they created. The Yamaha battery is
rated to maintain a high level of
performance for 1,000 cycles. For an
e-scooter with a swappable battery, that
sounds good enough. Donut Lab, as you
recall, claimed 100,000 cycles, 100
times more, but admittedly, that is an
estimate based on a limited amount of
testing. So, does this confirm the 400
watt hour per kilogram energy density
claimed at the cell level?
No, we can't make that jump, but it is
significantly better than the benchmark
e-scooter battery at the pack level. It
has more energy storage for longer
range, a lighter battery that makes it
easier to remove and replace from the
e-scooter. It's smaller, allowing for
easier packaging and a slimmer design.
Their proposed packaging would put thin
sheets of aluminum heat conductors in
between the individual cells. Those
would draw heat out to the sides of the
swappable pack where other heat sinks
would draw the heat away. Swappable
battery packs can be charged at home or
swapped for a full battery at a swapping
station. The Donut Lab design would
allow for the swapping station operator
to fast charge them if needed to meet
demand, getting the low state of charge
battery you just inserted ready for
someone else to take in minutes, not
hours. The Yamaha wall charger used with
their packs only puts out 3 amps. That's
why it takes 8 hours to go from 0 to
100% state of charge, 4 hours to go from
20 to 80%. Donut Lab showed their
battery peaking at 270 amps. That's 10 C
charging for their cell. 20 to 80% takes
under 5 and 1/2 minutes. This drives the
cell temperatures up to 82° C even with
those heat sinks, but we've seen their
cells survive those temperatures in
other tests. So, you could swap out the
battery pack in your e-scooter, put it
into a swap station and that machine
fast charges it so that it's ready for
the next rider in less than 10 minutes.
That's cool, but is it really critical?
I I don't think so. High-powered DC
charging makes the swap station more
expensive. Charging it just kind of fast
is probably good enough and it makes the
equipment less expensive. They end the
video talking about how this could
benefit last-mile delivery bikes. I'm
working on a video of the Honda Fastport
urban delivery vehicle that I got to
fart around on. In my opinion, the
smaller, lighter battery is really the
key selling point, not faster charging
for an e-scooter. And if we are to
believe all the claims, the improved
safety of solid-state batteries is
important. E-scooters with removable
batteries are frequently taken into
high-rise apartments in large cities.
Very convenient for recharging, but
there have been cases of crappy, cheap
batteries catching fire while AC
charging indoors and the results can be
devastating. Solid-state batteries are
inherently more safe. Sure, you can push
them harder and allow them to get
hotter, but just being safer is is great
enough. That's it for this episode with
Donut Lab. 35% more energy storage in
35% less space with 25% lower mass. That
sounds good, but you know, maybe not
alien technology.
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