TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

DONUT LAB Video #8 - More Energy & Less Weight?

8m 28s1,299 mots195 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

Donut Lab test video number eight. How

0:02

much longer can I keep this up? I don't

0:05

not know, but apparently season one for

0:07

Donut Lab's Gen 1 battery is going to

0:10

get dragged out much more. Here's my

0:12

summary for the key claims they've made

0:14

and the test that they've shown us.

0:16

Energy density of 400 watt hours per

0:19

kilogram and long life were recently

0:21

called into question by a now former

0:24

employee of Nordic Nano. That's the

0:26

company tasked with the mass production

0:28

of the Donut Lab battery. Marko does not

0:31

address those allegations in this video

0:34

and given that this was an official

0:36

criminal complaint filed, I'm sure the

0:39

Donut lawyers told them don't not talk

0:42

about this. So, they did not. What they

0:44

did talk about is another application

0:47

for their batteries given their

0:48

tolerance for elevated temperature,

0:51

lightweight, not that we know the

0:53

weight, and fast charging, they offer

0:55

advantages in the popular two-wheel

0:57

electric scooter category. Before we get

1:00

into those details, shout-out to Paul

1:03

who in my video for Donut Lab's April

1:05

Fools video pointed out that the lady

1:07

who interrupts is a reference to Javier

1:10

Seldron Cool. I I know I botched that

1:14

name. He works at Santza Energy, which

1:16

is part of the Donut Lab battery origin

1:20

conspiracy theory. So, thank you for

1:22

giving that insight. Maybe in weeks or

1:25

months from now when more details are

1:27

revealed, this will all make sense.

1:29

Maybe or we're just getting trolled.

1:32

Back to the scooter battery, the

1:34

benchmark battery is from Yamaha, which

1:36

powers their Neos urban electric

1:39

e-scooter. We don't know the exact

1:42

chemistry, but it is lithium ion with a

1:44

liquid electrolyte. Volts times amps

1:47

equals watts, so it's nearly 1 kWh

1:50

battery. Yamaha makes scooters that use

1:53

either one or two of these removable

1:55

batteries. It weighs 7.9 kg, so we can

1:59

calculate the energy density at the pack

2:03

level. Donut apparently doesn't mind

2:05

shaming other batteries by disclosing

2:07

their weight. It calculates to 122 watt

2:11

hours per kilogram at the pack level. At

2:14

the cell number, that would be a higher

2:17

result because you're taking out the

2:19

housing, wiring, the weight of all the

2:21

other components from the calculation.

2:23

According to Yamaha, charging for that

2:25

swappable battery probably would be done

2:27

indoors. You remove the battery and plug

2:30

it in. Wall outlets are 220 to 240 volts

2:33

AC in the UK and in Europe. The charger

2:37

puts out 3 amps and that charges a pack

2:39

from 0 to 100% in 8 hours. There is no

2:44

DC fast charging option for these

2:46

swappable batteries and they are

2:48

air-cooled, not liquid-cooled. For this

2:50

video, Donut Lab took their own cells

2:53

and made an alternative swappable pack,

2:56

not a direct replacement, but something

2:58

that could be used in a similar way. At

3:01

this point in the video, I felt like

3:03

this is

3:05

This is

3:07

What? This is boring. But upon the

3:10

fourth viewing, there are some clues

3:12

here. To make the pack compatible,

3:14

they'd need to achieve about 50 volts.

3:17

They can achieve that by wiring in

3:19

series 14 of the solid-state batteries

3:23

we've been seeing over and over again

3:25

throughout this series. That would give

3:27

this a nominal capacity of 26 amp hours.

3:31

I know in the last video, Donut Lab said

3:34

they prefer to use maximum capacity and

3:36

voltage, but we have specs for nominal,

3:39

so that's what I'm going to use. In the

3:41

video, Ville said that the solution

3:43

would have 35% more energy storage and

3:47

yes, it would be 1.3 kWh. 50.4 volts

3:52

times 26 amp hours. You can clearly see

3:55

that size is smaller, too. They say they

3:57

they've achieved a 35% reduction in

4:00

size. That looks about right. That plus

4:02

the 35% higher energy storage means the

4:06

volumetric energy density at the pack

4:09

level is more than twice as good.

4:12

Volumetric energy density is not

4:14

something they bragged about at the

4:16

reveal of their solid-state battery, but

4:18

it's important, especially for bikes and

4:20

scooters. He also said that mass was

4:23

lower at the pack level, a 25%

4:26

reduction. So, that would take the

4:28

swappable battery pack down to about 6

4:32

kg. We have watt hours and we have mass

4:35

and therefore, we have gravimetric

4:37

energy density of 221 watt hours per

4:41

kilogram. Cool. That's an 81% increase

4:44

in energy density by weight over the

4:47

pack used by Yamaha. Most of that should

4:50

be attributed to the battery cells,

4:52

although there is also the possibility

4:54

that the pack case itself and the other

4:57

components are lighter in the prototype

4:59

they created. The Yamaha battery is

5:01

rated to maintain a high level of

5:04

performance for 1,000 cycles. For an

5:07

e-scooter with a swappable battery, that

5:09

sounds good enough. Donut Lab, as you

5:12

recall, claimed 100,000 cycles, 100

5:16

times more, but admittedly, that is an

5:18

estimate based on a limited amount of

5:21

testing. So, does this confirm the 400

5:24

watt hour per kilogram energy density

5:27

claimed at the cell level?

5:29

No, we can't make that jump, but it is

5:32

significantly better than the benchmark

5:34

e-scooter battery at the pack level. It

5:37

has more energy storage for longer

5:39

range, a lighter battery that makes it

5:42

easier to remove and replace from the

5:44

e-scooter. It's smaller, allowing for

5:46

easier packaging and a slimmer design.

5:49

Their proposed packaging would put thin

5:51

sheets of aluminum heat conductors in

5:53

between the individual cells. Those

5:55

would draw heat out to the sides of the

5:57

swappable pack where other heat sinks

6:01

would draw the heat away. Swappable

6:03

battery packs can be charged at home or

6:05

swapped for a full battery at a swapping

6:08

station. The Donut Lab design would

6:10

allow for the swapping station operator

6:12

to fast charge them if needed to meet

6:14

demand, getting the low state of charge

6:16

battery you just inserted ready for

6:19

someone else to take in minutes, not

6:21

hours. The Yamaha wall charger used with

6:24

their packs only puts out 3 amps. That's

6:28

why it takes 8 hours to go from 0 to

6:30

100% state of charge, 4 hours to go from

6:33

20 to 80%. Donut Lab showed their

6:36

battery peaking at 270 amps. That's 10 C

6:40

charging for their cell. 20 to 80% takes

6:43

under 5 and 1/2 minutes. This drives the

6:46

cell temperatures up to 82° C even with

6:50

those heat sinks, but we've seen their

6:51

cells survive those temperatures in

6:54

other tests. So, you could swap out the

6:57

battery pack in your e-scooter, put it

6:59

into a swap station and that machine

7:01

fast charges it so that it's ready for

7:03

the next rider in less than 10 minutes.

7:06

That's cool, but is it really critical?

7:09

I I don't think so. High-powered DC

7:11

charging makes the swap station more

7:13

expensive. Charging it just kind of fast

7:16

is probably good enough and it makes the

7:18

equipment less expensive. They end the

7:20

video talking about how this could

7:22

benefit last-mile delivery bikes. I'm

7:24

working on a video of the Honda Fastport

7:27

urban delivery vehicle that I got to

7:29

fart around on. In my opinion, the

7:31

smaller, lighter battery is really the

7:34

key selling point, not faster charging

7:36

for an e-scooter. And if we are to

7:38

believe all the claims, the improved

7:41

safety of solid-state batteries is

7:43

important. E-scooters with removable

7:46

batteries are frequently taken into

7:48

high-rise apartments in large cities.

7:50

Very convenient for recharging, but

7:52

there have been cases of crappy, cheap

7:55

batteries catching fire while AC

7:57

charging indoors and the results can be

7:59

devastating. Solid-state batteries are

8:02

inherently more safe. Sure, you can push

8:04

them harder and allow them to get

8:06

hotter, but just being safer is is great

8:09

enough. That's it for this episode with

8:12

Donut Lab. 35% more energy storage in

8:16

35% less space with 25% lower mass. That

8:21

sounds good, but you know, maybe not

8:24

alien technology.

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