Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(1169)
-
▼
January
(145)
- UK to spend over £7bn on electric cars by 2014
- Peugeot delivers electric car to EDF Energy
- Tesla Model X SUV to be based on Lotus APX concept?
- First Test Drive Of The New Hybrid Ferrari F150 [V...
- Chevy Volt To Be Available Nationwide By The End O...
- GM Says “No Thanks” To More Government Loans
- Clean tech at heart of Siemens' record results
- Steam punk concept motorcycle art by Kevin Mowrer
- Volkswagen debuts 313mpg XL1 concept hybrid [Video]
- 53% of Brits are considering buying a hybrid or al...
- World Can Be Powered by Alternative Energy in 20-4...
- Toro Rosso making most of Ferrari KERS expertise
- Obama to push Congress to fund more electric car p...
- Nissan to reach full Leaf EV output speed by March...
- Daimler moving fast on hybrids
- GM looking to double Chevy Volt production to 120,...
- Mazda to begin EV trials in 2012
- Cosworth to sell integrated KERS package by 2013
- Porches 918 RSR hybrid will be developed alongside...
- Renault spies 'leaked electric car strategy'
- Concept vehicles by Matthew C. Barrett
- Demand For Chevrolet Volt Sky High
- Mercedes GTK vehicle concept by Pascal Eggert
- China nationalizes 11 rare earth mines
- Hitach establish lithium-ion battery JV with Ube I...
- Mitsubishi Motors to use Toshiba battery in EV
- Andros Trophy Electrique Isola 2000 2010 [Video]
- EVs to 'take off like iPhones'
- BMW Bypasses TV To Promote New Electric Car
- Green Overdrive: Test Drive the Porsche Cayenne S ...
- Renault manager sues over espionage accusation
- Mitsubishi to Introduce Eight Hybrid, Electric Car...
- Purolator orders 600 hybrid electric vehicles
- France’s First All-Electric Luxury Car
- Lexus to use GP celebrity races to launch CT200h h...
- Chevy Volt Test Drive!
- Tesla Model S Hits the Road [Video]
- Foxconn moves into the Electric Vehicle Market
- Peugeot switch on 22 UK based electric dealers
- Tesla Roadster Traction control demonstration in S...
- A Tesla Roadster drives to Scotland while the BBC ...
- Single-seater robotic electric car debuts in Japan
- BMW Megacity 'will not be cheap'
- Renault fires two accused of spying on electric car
- Fully Charged fossil Landy
- BMW something
- Corvette Concept
- Hamann BMW Tycoon
- Audi R8 Modified Car version
- Car and Motorcycle Modification Contest
- Zytek Hybrid To Make European Debut
- Toyota Studies Magnesium Battery as Lithium Alternate
- Inhabitat Sees Green at the Detroit Auto Show
- New Toyota Prius C Concept @ Detroit Motor Show [V...
- Toyota Developing Induction Motors to Break Relian...
- Mercy E 200 K Gusur Nissan Cedric dan Toyota Crown
- Car Modification Contest
- GAMBAR MODIFIKASI SUZUKI SWIFT 2009
- KONTES MODIFIKASI HONDA JAZZ EXTREAM
- Mitsubishi i-MiEV goes on sale in 15 European coun...
- Electric motorcycle sets a new world record run 7....
- Toyota to Start Making Lithium Batteries for Its P...
- Green Overdrive: Under the Hood of Tesla / Toyota ...
- Old School Batmobile
- Pimped Out Car
- Acura Advanced Sports Car Concept
- BYD Exec Reveals U.S. Strategy [Video]
- 2011 Tesla Roadster 2.5 now on sale in Australia
- Prius Goes Plural - Cast your Vote
- Fully Charged Episode 12: Drive a Tesla from Londo...
- Toyota sees Tesla EV battery cost at 1/3
- Ford Focus Electric motor Exposed
- GM Chairman Says Voltec Minivan and Hatchback Are ...
- SAE taskforce working on standards for wireless EV...
- Prius 'family' to help defend Toyota's hybrid status
- Rolls Royce considering an electric car
- BYD Scrambles to Redesign Electric Car
- Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG E-Cell @ Detroit Auto Show
- Audi Unveils A6 Hybrid @ Detroit Auto Show
- Ford say EVs / Hybrids could be 25% of sales by 2020
- Toyota Reveals Prius Family @ Detroit Auto Show [V...
- Tesla exceeds 1,500 Roadster deliveries worldwide
- Concept automobile art by Jesper Andersen
- Ford Electric Vehicles with Ed Begley, Jr [Video]
- Porsche unveils 918 RSR flywheel hybrid racer @ De...
- Ford announce C-MAX Hybrid & C-MAX Energi plug-in ...
- GM's Segway based EN-V Impress @ Consumer Electron...
- Toyota Delivers Prius Family to Offset Nissan, GM ...
- Rolls-Royce Phantom $320,000
- Lamborghini Murcielago $279,900
- Aston Martin Vanquish $255,000
- Nine-year-old Toyota Prius retains its youth
- Rapid Recharge Improves Electric Vehicles
- Renault says technology safe in industrial spy case
- Sanyo to boost output of auto Lithium batteries 150%
- Green Overdrive: VW’s Electric Golf! [Video]
- Renault EV leaks said to pose risk to Nissan
- Sunswift Solar Electric Car Breaking the Guinness ...
- TTXGP on the Trans World Sport TV program [Video]
- Ford Unveils Focus Electric @ CES [Video]
-
▼
January
(145)
Toyota Developing Induction Motors to Break Reliance on China
Toyota Motor Corp. is striving to develop a different type of electric motor to escape a simmering trade conflict involving China's grip on a rare mineral.
The Japanese auto maker believes it is near a breakthrough in developing electric motors for hybrid cars that eliminates the use of rare earth metals, whose prices have risen sharply in the past year as China restricted supply. The minerals are found in the magnets used in the motors.
All electric motors rely on magnets to make them work. The new motor Toyota is working on is based on the very common and inexpensive induction motor, found in such devices as kitchen mixers. Induction motors use electromagnets—magnets that only have their magnetic attraction when power is applied to them.
Most motors used in electric and hybrid cars today use a different type of motor that relies on permanent magnets. These magnets always have a magnetic field—akin to the magnets used to attach things to refrigerator doors.
But the permanent magnets found in electric-car motors, unlike those that hold up the school lunch menu, are made from neodymium, a rare-earth mineral that is almost entirely mined and refined in China.
As car companies race to improve electric and hybrid vehicles, their reliance on metals like neodymium and lithium—used in batteries found in electric and hybrid cars—is raising a host of new geopolitical issues over access to the minerals. The supply of many of these minerals is controlled by China.
Toyota has taken several steps to reduce its dependence on China for the materials, including investing in a lithium venture in Argentina and launching a joint venture in Vietnam to prospect for rare metals like neodymium.
The auto industry purchases 40% of the world's supply of neodymium and Toyota buys more than any other company, said Jack Lifton, a rare earth materials expert and founder of Technology Metals Research in Carpentersville, Ill. There is about a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of neodymium in every Prius, he said. Toyota declined to comment on this figure.
"It would be a big change in demand for neodymium" if Toyota switched to an induction motor, said Mr. Lifton.
General Motors Co., which launched its Volt electric car last month, also is looking into alternative types of motors. "We have ongoing development in those areas and the induction motors do work," said Pete Savagian, who leads GM's hybrid powertrain engineering division.
Continental AG of Germany, one of the world's largest auto parts makers, said it already has developed a rare-earth-free motor that will be used in an undisclosed electric car due out in Europe this year. This motor uses a variation of an electric motor often found in power plants.
Part of the rationale for developing this motor is to avoid rare earth metals, but it mostly is a move to lower costs, said Mike Crane, who runs Continental's hybrid and electric vehicle programs.
"Even in the best scenario of supply, these [rare earth-based] magnets are very expensive," Mr. Crane said.
China produces about 95% of the world's supply of neodymium and last summer the country began restricting exports. In December, China announced a 67% increase in export tariffs on the metal and has declared new limits on exports this year.
Neodymium prices have quadrupled in the past year, according to Lynas Corp., an Australian company developing a giant mine and refinery for the material.
Rare earth minerals are a grouping of 17 chemically similar elements that are usually found together in ore and are refined and split apart. They are used in magnets and semiconductors and a host of other technologies. The U.S. and Australia have deposits of them but lack the expertise in extracting and refining the minerals.
For Toyota, getting around this barrier is crucial. The auto maker at this week's Detroit car show announced the expansion of its hybrid-electric lineup by adding two new Prius variants and plans to spread the technology to all of its models in the next decade.
"The technology that would allow us not to use the magnets and yet to make a smaller size, high-performance motor will come soon," said Takeshi Uchiyamada, Toyota's global chief engineer.
"We currently have such a motor, but controlling the motor is rather difficult," he said.
Mr. Uchiyamada wouldn't say when the motor would be introduced.
Toyota spokesman John Hanson said the new motor could come in the "near term." He added: "It looks like we could reduce cost, weight and mass and avoid the geopolitical issues with the rare earth metals."
Elias Strangas, an electrical engineering professor at Michigan State University, said induction motors that serve as the basis of Toyota's work "are cheap to make and as rugged as you can get, but they are not terribly efficient, and they are big." Improving them "is kind of a holy grail in motors."
Prof. Strangas said he had heard rumors of Toyota working on an advanced induction motor, but hasn't seen a published study on the work. "I would like to see the numbers [on the motor's performance] to say they are convincing," he said.
The permanent magnet motor took off only in the past decade as car makers tried to find more efficient and powerful motors for electric vehicles and hybrids.
"But then we discovered they are a bit expensive, and the rare-earth places where they are mined are not too many," Prof. Strangas said. "We are now trying to revisit very old technology and remove the problems" in induction motors.
At the same time, Toyota affiliate Toyota Tsusho Corp., which imports metals, said in October it would begin working with Vietnamese companies to extract the rare earth metals from deposits there.
A year ago, the same company struck a deal with an Argentinean company to develop a lithium mine to secure a direct source for the key element in advanced electric batteries.
The vast majority of the world's mined deposits of lithium are in China, Chile, Argentina and Bolivia.
There is pressure on the entire automotive industry to develop better supplies of these materials because of a slew of new and planned all-electric cars, including Nissan Motor Co.'s new Leaf.
Electric cars require much larger motors, with more rare earth metals, than hybrids such as the Prius.