Hybrid and zero-emission EVs for light- to heavy-duty transportation applications present great commercial opportunities for advanced high-energy batteries. Battery requirements vary with the application and offer viable alternatives for multiple technologies. In this symposium, we will discuss the development of hybrid and electric vehicle battery systems and the latest developments in advanced batteries to be commercialized within this transportation battery market, while assessing consumer demand, competing technologies, and overcoming the challenges to commercialization.

Tuesday, November 3

HEAVY DUTY ELECTRIC VEHICLE MARKET

9:00 am

Incentives and Regulatory Drivers Supporting California’s Transition to Zero-Emission Public Transportation and Goods Movement

Leslie Goodbody, Engineer, California Air Resources Board

Just as California has led the way in transforming the automotive sector, it has also taken a leadership role in driving transit, trucking, airports and seaports toward zero-emission technologies, especially in and near those communities most impacted by poor air quality. This talk will provide an overview of CARB’s regulatory strategies, incentive programs, and demonstration projects that are helping to further advance and commercialize the use of battery electric and fuel cell technology in trucks, buses and cargo-handling equipment.

9:40 am

Electric Vehicles: Emerging Markets, Battery Demand & Chemistry Choices

Alex Holland, PhD, Analyst, Technology, IDTechEx Ltd.

Battery development is dominated by the electric car market, but the electrification of transport will be widespread, beyond just cars, and different modes of transport will have their own performance requirements. Which battery chemistries can meet them? IDTechEx appraises various technologies, including Li-S, solid-state and advanced Li-ion batteries and their suitability for different applications. Through extensive primary and secondary research, IDTechEx provides technical and market insight on various transport applications and the energy storage technologies used within them.

10:00 am Coffee Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
10:20 am

Global EV Bus Market Outlook

Shmuel De-Leon, CEO, Shmuel De-Leon Energy Ltd.

EV busses are driving a successful penetration rate worldwide and specifically in China. What are the market drivers and how did the changes in the Chinese subsidies policy effect that market during 2019? E-bus batteries are large and responsible for ~18% of all Li-ion cells manufactured capacity worldwide during 2019. Review of the main Li-ion cells chemistries used for that market. Review of the main e-bus cells and battery pack makers in China and out of China. Market expectations for 2020.


INNOVATIONS IN BATTERY SYSTEMS FOR HEAVY-DUTY APPLICATIONS

10:40 am

Kenworth’s Electric Fuel Cell Truck Program

Brian Lindgren, Application Engineer, Kenworth Truck Company
11:00 am Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
11:20 am MODERATED Q&A:

Session Wrap-Up

Panel Moderator:
Michael Baker, Air Resources Engineer, Mobile Source Control Division, California Air Resources Board
Panelists:
Leslie Goodbody, Engineer, California Air Resources Board
Alex Holland, PhD, Analyst, Technology, IDTechEx Ltd.
Shmuel De-Leon, CEO, Shmuel De-Leon Energy Ltd.
Brian Lindgren, Application Engineer, Kenworth Truck Company
11:50 am Lunch Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

INNOVATIONS IN BATTERY SYSTEMS FOR HEAVY-DUTY APPLICATIONS

12:20 pm

Operationalizing Battery Life Optimization in an All-Electric, Autonomous Vehicle Fleet

Ken R. Ferguson, PhD, Senior Engineer. Tech Operations, Cruise

The usage profile of a vehicle in an electric, autonomous vehicle fleet will be significantly different than the usage profile for a typical consumer vehicle. Due to the high cost of HV battery replacements in such a fleet, strategies for extending battery life will be critical to
the financial viability of autonomous ride-share applications. In this talk we will explore methods for operationalizing techniques to extend battery lifetime in an autonomous fleet.

12:40 pm

ACTIA Battery Packs for Zero-Emission Buses

Greg Fritz, EV Business Unit Manager, Strategy & Mgmt & Business Development, ACTIA Group

ACTIA will present specifications, field data and simulation results for battery packs used in zero-emission buses (ZEBs). The specific focus will be on the battery chemistries and pack designs used to meet the different requirements of fuel-cell versus fast-charge versus overnight-charge transit ZEBs.

1:00 pm

Battery Performance in Fleet Electrification

James Castelaz, Founder & CTO, Motiv Power Systems Inc.

This presentation will focus on battery performance for fleets utilizing Motiv-powered all-electric trucks and buses and will highlight field operations data from several diverse fleets. Real-world examples include vehicle performance reports on routes and missions from a variety of industry verticals, including delivery services and school transportation. Motiv will also present data centered around its approach of using highly reliable and cost-effective mass-market battery packs to power these vehicles.

1:20 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
1:40 pm Refresh Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

INNOVATIONS IN BATTERY SYSTEMS FOR HEAVY-DUTY APPLICATIONS

2:00 pm

Battery and Battery Considerations for Medium and Heavy-Duty Electric Vehicle Applications

Andrew F. Burke, PhD, Research Engineer, University of California Davis

This paper is concerned with the specification and design of lithium batteries to be used in medium- and heavy-duty (MD/HD) electric vehicles of various types. Comparisons are made of cycle life, power density, and thermal management requirements for batteries in light-duty and MD/HD duty applications. For the most part at the present time, batteries for the MD/HD applications are assembled using cells developed for the light-duty applications and it
is assumed that the battery pack cost ($/kWh) will be the same for the two quite different
applications. The reasonableness of this assumption is discussed in the paper.

2:20 pm

Case Study: Deployment of 27 Electric Heavy-Duty Trucks at 3 Facilities

Michael Baker, Air Resources Engineer, Mobile Source Control Division, California Air Resources Board

Through a State of California competitive solicitation, this project was awarded a grant to deploy 24 class 8 yard trucks and three class 5 service trucks for three different users at at two rail yards and one warehouse, and includes infrastructure (23 EVSE). The project experienced a variety of circumstances. The vehicles were deployed in two phases, with input from users of phase one yard trucks applied to design for an improved and more
commercially-viable phase two version of the yard truck.

2:40 pm

Electric Vehicle Battery Standards Development

Bhavya Kotak, Research Associate, Safe Electromobility, Technische Hochschule Ingolstadt

Electric vehicles (EVs) possess a high amount of energy within their batteries. During EV accidents, all this energy is released in one go and often causes a fire. Such incidents have raised concerns regarding battery safety, subsequently challenging the regulatory bodies that develop the battery testing standards. This study demonstrates the gap that has been identified on standards such as ISO 12405, IEC 62660 and GB-T31485 that are essential to be addressed for the safety of battery and the EV consumer.

3:20 pm MODERATED Q&A:

Session Wrap-Up

Panel Moderator:
Alex Holland, PhD, Analyst, Technology, IDTechEx Ltd.
Panelists:
Ken R. Ferguson, PhD, Senior Engineer. Tech Operations, Cruise
Greg Fritz, EV Business Unit Manager, Strategy & Mgmt & Business Development, ACTIA Group
James Castelaz, Founder & CTO, Motiv Power Systems Inc.
Michael Baker, Air Resources Engineer, Mobile Source Control Division, California Air Resources Board
Bhavya Kotak, Research Associate, Safe Electromobility, Technische Hochschule Ingolstadt
Andrew F. Burke, PhD, Research Engineer, University of California Davis
3:50 pm Interactive Roundtable Discussions - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

Join your colleagues and fellow delegates for a focused, informal discussion moderated by a member of our speaking faculty.  A small group format allows participants to meet potential collaborators, share examples from their own work and discuss ideas with peers.


ROUNDTABLE: Silicon Anodes and Cells

Benjamin Park, PhD, Founder & CTO, Enevate Corp.
  • What is the maturity level of Si today?
  • What different approches are there with Si?
  • What are the challenges and how can the industry work together to solve the problem?
  • How does Si compare with other next-gen technologies such as solid-state/lithium metal?
Mark Gunderson, Engineering Manger, Electronics, Advanced Battery Systems, Clarios LLC
  • How does EMC effect battery performance and safety?
  • Why are there unique challenges to BMS EMC performance over other automotive systems?
  • How can EMC risk be mitigated early in the product development cycle?
  • What EMC performance improvement techniques can be employed in BMS design?  

ROUNDTABLE: Battery Failure Databank

William Q. Walker, PhD, Aerospace Technologist, NASA-Johnson Space Center
  • The Battery Failure Databank contains thermal runaway results gathered from nearly 300 small format fractional thermal runaway calorimetry (S-FTRC) experiments.
  • The databank has two components; (1) a Microsoft ExcelTM component containing tabular thermal runaway results and (2) a library of high speed x-ray videography videos obtained from combination S-FTRC and synchrotron experiments.
  • Discussion will be focused on what is in the databank, how to access the databank, and how engineers and researchers can use the data to do their own research.
  • Participants will learn how to use the information in the databank to develop safer batteries

ROUNDTABLE: Battery Pack System Cost and Safety - Will Future xEV Battery Packs Increase in Complexity or Simplify and How Will Cost and Safety Be Impacted?

Kevin Konecky, Director, Battery Systems, Fisker, Inc.
  • How will pack designs change to mitigate the increased failure modes of Nickel-rich chemistries?
  • What materials might be added to increase safety?
  • i.e. thermal event mitigation materials
  • Will BMS designs increase or decrease in complexity?
  • Redundancy for functional safety or de-contented BMS similar to NiMH?
  • What system-level (non-cell) cost reductions are possible for 2025?
4:50 pm Close of Day

Wednesday, November 4

WIRELESS CHARGING SYSTEMS

9:00 am

Wireless Charging Systems for Heavy-Duty Applications

Michael P. Masquelier, CEO & CTO, WAVE Wireless Advanced Vehicle Electrification

Wireless charging presents a practical and economical solution for EV adoption and solves limitations such as battery size, cost, recharge speed, vehicle range, and space constraints of charging infrastructure. This session will cover the commercial viability of advanced wireless charging technology with examples of systems for transit, port, industrial, off-road, and other heavy-duty vehicles. Fully automated, hands-free charging operation
enabled by ruggedized pads embedded in the roadway and vehicle-mounted receiving units with further discussion of high-power deployments and synergy with future autonomous vehicles will also be covered.

LIB CHEMISTRIES AND ALTERNATIVE APPLICATIONS

9:20 am

Unlocking the Full Potential of Li-Ion Batteries

Pavel Calderon, CCO, Nortical

Welcome to an in-depth session focusing on upcoming challenges of our sustainable future. How is our electric transport and power segment developing? What future challenges need to be met? How do we meet the urgent need for actions against climate change while creating a responsible and just battery value chain? How are the Nordic countries approaching these issues?

9:40 am

Cell Format Analysis for Urban Air Mobility

Martin Talke, Principal, Umlaut Inc.

In the current development of electrical vertical take-off and landing vehicles, the current designs of the battery pack use mostly round cell format, primarily because it is easily and cheaply available. This presentation will evaluate and analyze the advantages and disadvantages of each of the common cell types–round, prismatic and pouch–in a design
of a battery pack that meets the requirements for safety, energy density and total costs of ownership eVTOLs and/or aircrafts.

10:00 am Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
10:20 am MODERATED Q&A:

Session Wrap-Up

Panel Moderator:
Leslie Goodbody, Engineer, California Air Resources Board
Panelists:
Michael P. Masquelier, CEO & CTO, WAVE Wireless Advanced Vehicle Electrification
Pavel Calderon, CCO, Nortical
Martin Talke, Principal, Umlaut Inc.
10:50 am Coffee Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
11:10 am Close of Symposium

PLENARY SESSION PANEL: EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES AND INDUSTRY PERSPECTIVES

11:15 am Plenary Solutions Theatre (Sponsorship Opportunities Available)

This panel session will feature a series of short podium presentations on emerging technologies and industry perspectives in vehicle electrification. Each speaker will have 7-8 minutes to present. After all speakers have presented, there will be a moderated Q&A between the speakers and attendees. The presentations are not meant to be a corporate or specific product pitch. Each speaker will focus on a technology and solution framed around a problem or issue related to the expanding market of advanced vehicles and how their organization is solving it.

Malli Veeramurthy, Lead Engineer, Battery Development, E-Mobility, FEV North America

The presentation will outline the key innovations FEV has implemented in designing the automotive battery packs to minimize pack factors < 1.5 thus maximizing the specific energy capacity of a pack. We will also be addressing the key design considerations for safety and durability while meeting the standards. 

Grant Gothing, Chief Technology Officer, Bloomy

Many EV subsystems are sensitive to battery performance and behavior. The drivetrain, inverters, ECM and ECUs all interact with the battery, and are affected by SoC, SoH, imbalance, alarms, and DTCs. These interactions are difficult, expensive, and dangerous to replicate using actual EV batteries. Grant Gothing presents EV subsystem testing using the real BMS and COTS battery cell simulation hardware. Benefits include improved safety, reliability, repeatability, efficiency, cost and test coverage over real battery testing.

11:45 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Session Wrap-Up

Panel Moderator:
Brian M. Barnett, PhD, President, Battery Perspectives
Panelists:
Grant Gothing, CTO, Bloomy Controls Inc
Malli Veeramurthy, Lead Engineer, Battery Development, E-Mobility, FEV North America
12:15 pm Lunch Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall





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Battery Chemistries for Automotive Applications
xEV Battery Technology, Application, and Market

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