'Offers the 4R's – repair, remanufacturing, refurbishing and repurposing'

http://ecopreneurist.com/2016/03/15/oklahoma-city-start-up-recycles-ev-batteries/
Oklahoma City Start-up Recycles EV batteries
[2016/03/15]  Steve Hanley

[image  
http://ecopreneurist.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Spiers-New-Technologies-.png
SNT recycles EV batteries
]

Most EV batteries have plenty of life left in them when they are no longer
able to power an electric car. Typically, they have 70% to 80% of their
power still available. For automotive use, a battery must be able to charge
and discharge rapidly and operate at high current levels. But even when that
ability degrades, it can still work fine in steady state applications such
as storing electrical power from the grid or from renewable power sources
like wind turbines of solar panels.

Most auto makers haven’t really thought very much about what to do with old
EV batteries. They are too busy making new ones. That was the opening Dirk
Spiers of Oklahoma City needed. In March, 2015 he started Spiers New
Technologies. He hired two talented associates, engineer Bryan Schultz and
algorithms research engineer John Junger. Recently he spoke to Charged EVs
about what his company does.

“We call it life cycle management for advanced battery systems, and we offer
the ‘4 R’ range of services within that – repair, remanufacturing,
refurbishing and repurposing. It starts with the recovery of the core, which
is the battery pack that comes out of a vehicle. We help the OEMs to bring
all used cores to a central location and check them for any safety issues.

“Today, most of those packs are coming from dealers who have done warranty
replacements and from things like test projects that have concluded. We
collect all of the batteries’ data in the background, and have built some
pretty advanced database management software.”

In order to operate at a profit, it is important for Spiers and his team to
diagnose the batteries they receive quickly and accurately. That’s where
Junger’s algorithms come into play. “We see packs that are still really good
except for one problem that caused a system error. It’s not usually an
independent cell that fails, because they’re manufactured to such a high
standard. It’s usually a thermistor failure or a bolt on the bus bar that
came loose, which are good candidates to be fixed and sent back to the
original application.”

Getting auto makers to reuse a repaired battery is tricky. The company
engineers naturally have a proprietary interest in making sure the
refurbished battery pack will perform as expected. According to Gas 2, many
of them were skeptical at first that Spiers and his team knew what they were
doing. Spiers says most of them took quite a lot of convincing before they
were willing to rely on SNT’s evaluations.

“We recently had some very long discussions with one OEM about the accuracy
of our process before they came around,” he says. “OEMs know their battery
packs really, really well. They’re really smart engineers and they know
their stuff. But I like to think of them as being like early mothers. They
give birth to their battery pack and they know it better than anyone else.

“But at some point, the batteries go out into the real world and things
start to change. So we’re a bit like a daycare center that needs to prove
that we’ll take care of their battery packs. Eventually we need to test them
to be able to compare them to others, and because our testing methods may be
different from the OEM’s, we need to explain why they are just as
effective.”

Today, several of the companies SNT works with have adopted those evaluation
tools for use internally. They find them to be faster and more accurate than
the diagnostics they developed in-house.

Repurposed batteries can be used to store electricity in residential or
commercial use. That stored energy can help balance the load on the
electrical grid and make renewable energy work efficiently, reducing the use
of fossil fuels, especially coal.

If a battery pack can’t be refurbished or repurposed, it still has many
components that can be salvaged and re-used. SNT is becoming expert at
harvesting parts that are still useful and reselling them on the secondary
market. The company currently has 70,000 square feet of space at its
Oklahoma City headquarters and is considering expanding.
[© Sustainable Enterprises Media]
...
https://chargedevs.com/features/second-life-spiers-new-technologies-develops-advanced-battery-classification-techniques/
Second life: Spiers New Technologies develops advanced battery
classification techniques
March 1, 2016




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-spiersnewtechnologies-com-repurposes-EV-batteries-in-OK-City-OK-tp4681119.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to