http://mashable.com/2017/09/14/samsung-long-distance-battery-electric-cars/
Samsung will challenge Tesla with its own electric car batteries
Sep 14, 2017  Mark Kaufman

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Image: LightRocket via Getty Images
]

With its claims of unprecedented power storage, Samsung plans to challenge
the electric car batteries now being pumped out of the Tesla Gigafactory.

Samsung has chosen a wise time to start building long-range car batteries:
China plans to ban gas-powered cars and automobile giant Volkswagen will
offer electric versions of all their vehicles by 2030. 

These millions of forthcoming vehicles will need powerful batteries, and
earlier this week Samsung introduced its “multifunctional battery packs” at
the 2017 Frankfurt Motor Show, which it claims can power electric cars for
up to 430 miles. That would theoretically get you from Los Angeles to San
Francisco with about 50 miles to spare.

For reference, Tesla says that the recently released Model 3, its affordable
class vehicle, has batteries that can power the car for 220 miles.

The 200-mile difference between Tesla and Samsung sounds notable, but Tesla
batteries have been powering its electric vehicles for years, while
Samsung’s innovative offering has yet to hit the road. Without road-testing,
its unknown what type and size of electric vehicle will actually be able to
travel some 430 miles when powered by Samsung’s battery packs.

Although Samsung’s battery division, Samsung SDI, didn’t reveal too many
details about its multifunctional battery pack, it has some similarities
with the small, cylindrical batteries Tesla is putting into its Model 3,
called the 2170 battery cell. Currently being produced in Tesla’s sprawling
desert Gigafactory, these 2170 batteries can be held in the palm your hand,
and Elon Musk calls them the highest density battery cells in the world.

Samsung is apparently placing similar cylindrical batteries (called 21700
batteries) in book or block-like modules that increase the batteries energy
storage. In a press release, Samsung said that more of these battery-packed
modules can be added to a vehicle to increase the vehicle's driving range:

    “Its users can change the number of modules as they want as if they
place books on a shelf. For example, if 20 modules are installed in a
premium car, it can go 600 to 700 kilometers. If 10 to 12 modules are
mounted on a regular sedan, it can run up to 300 kilometers.”

If a sedan-like electric vehicle can run 700 kilometers (430 miles) without
a charge, it will certainly prove a formidable challenge to Tesla’s electric
sedans. For now, however, Tesla’s batteries are powering cars on roads all
over the nation. And alongside these roads the company is strategically
placing Supercharger stations to power up cars in “a matter of minutes” —
for those taking their Teslas on trips across the country.
[© mashable.com]



http://english.etnews.com/20170926200002
Samsung SDI and LG Chemicals Compete in Order to Supply Their 21,700
Cylindrical Batteries to Jaguar
Sep 26, 2017  According to industries on the 25th, Jaguar decided to use
21,700 cylindrical batteries for its next electric vehicle model that will
be released in the future and ...




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