LTO Cells: Should we use them in EV applications (2024)

There has been a lot of discussion around suitability of LTO Cells in EV applications. In this article, we examine the pros, and cons of it:

  • LTO has lower nominal voltage of 2.4 V compared to LFP(3.2V) and NMC(3.7V), which leads to a lower specific energy (about 30–110 Wh/kg) than conventional lithium-ion battery(For LFP it is 90-165 wh/kg and for NMC around 270 wh/kg) technologies. As a result of poor energy density, the amount of anode active material loading tends to be more and this increases the overall weight of the cell. The gravimetric energy density is more than Lead Acid batteries but lower than LFP batteries that use graphite anode.Poor energy density leads to substantially heavier, and bigger batteries, and hence not suitable for automotive application. Payload capacity of the vehicle has to be sacrificed (carry less passengers, or load) resulting in reduced earnings in commercial applications.
  • As the price of the battery depends on the raw material used in it, due to higher raw material weight it becomes costlier than many of the others. It is not cheap.
  • Vehicle fitted with unnecessarily heavy batteries end up spending too much energy just carrying the battery.. If you have an NMC battery instead (in a bus or truck), you can carry a few extra passengers or a few 100 extra kilos of cargo, and earn more: LTO kills your income if you are in the transportation business to earn a living.
  • LTO charges fast, but that is of little use, as fast charging is expensive, and a large number of simultaneous fast chargers cannot be supported by the grid for foreseeable future (say a bus has 100 KWH battery, one hour charging itself will require 100 KW charger; even if the bus give 50KM with one charge, and a fleet of say 100 buses need to charge 3 times to deliver 150Km service each, we are talking of 100 KWH*3*50=15 MWH; If all of this has been delivered in one hour, you will need 15 MW connection). While there is a lot of hype, and expectations about fast charging, a number of facts need to be kept in mind:
    1. Fast chargers are far more expensive. Consequently, the cost of fast-charging is much higher.
    2. Given the current state of the Grid, it will be a while before large number of fast chargers are available. Separate powerlines may need to be drawn from sub-stations, and may not be feasible in already populated areas. Users may have to drive extra to access fast chargers.
  • LTO cells do give many cycles: 20-30K. It will practically last for several years – may be decades. It is good, and bad: No vehicle will last that long, and when the vehicle is being scrapped, will the vehicle owner get fair value for the battery? It is also possible that in 5 years much better technology will be available, and one may get stuck with an ancient, suboptimal technology.
  • However, one of the primary challenges is cell gassing due to operating in higher temperatures which can significantly limit life despite the excellent lifetime performance of LTO anodes. Gas evolution has been previously attributed to water impurities from the electrolyte, moisture trapped in the electrode, the breakdown of lithium salt forming hydrofluoric acid (HF), and/or solvent reactions with the surface of the electrode. And the release of gas while cycling, resulting in the LTO battery pack swelling. If these happen, the high-cycle life expectation gets betrayed.
  • As for the lithium titanate battery claimed to have an extended carrier existence, it’s far extra to be really verified, and certified!
  • It is an ancient technology, and there are newer, and better options available.

Because of the multiple fire-incidents, there is a general concern about the safety of EVs. There is absolutely no doubt that EVs have to be safe, and fire incidents do not happen.

We have to understand that, any concentrated source of energy is a risky item. Higher, the energy density, higher is the risk. Petrol/Diesel have much higher energy densities, and catch fire much easier. Coal was much safer compared to Petrol/Diesel, but the world did adopt Petrol/Diesel/CNG/LPG by handling these fuels in a safe manner.

In search of safe batteries, we should not go back to safe, but ancient, inefficient storage options. We should be building safe batteries with Advanced Chemistries. With proper instrumentation, electronics, and software, it is possible to build safe batteries. TESLA has been using the NMC Chemistry (substantially higher Energy Density than LTO) for a long time. There were some fire incidents in the beginning, but they were able to fix it completely.

Author:

LTO Cells: Should we use them in EV applications (1)

Mohan Satyaranjan

CEO

Taqanal Energy

Mohan Satyaranjan is currently an entrepreneur focused on developing technology to address barriers to EV adoption. Prior to turning an entrepreneur, Mohan spent more than 35 years in Networking & Telecom R&D. He built ‘billion+ dollars a year’ product lines, from scratch, at both Cisco Systems, and Juniper Networks. He has held director, and above positions at NetApp, Juniper Networks, and Cisco Systems.

Published in Telematics Wire

Tags

Electric Vehicle LTO Cells Taqanal Energy

LTO Cells: Should we use them in EV applications (2024)

FAQs

What are the advantages of LTO cells? ›

LTO carries certain advantages over the conventional Li-ion with graphite anode, including the absence of SEI film formation and lithium plating when fast charging and charging at low temperature. LTO's Thermal stability under high temperature is superior to other Li-ion systems.

What are the disadvantages of LTO batteries? ›

A disadvantage of lithium-titanate batteries is their lower inherent voltage (2.4 V), which leads to a lower specific energy (about 30–110 Wh/kg) than conventional lithium-ion battery technologies, which have an inherent voltage of 3.7 V.

What is LTO in EV? ›

Li-titanate oxide (LTO) replaces the graphite in the anode of the typical Li-Ion battery and forms the materials into a spinel 3D crystal structure. Having a nominal a cell voltage of 2.40V, it releases a high current discharge current that is 10 times the capacity of the other types of lithium batteries.

What are the applications of LTO batteries? ›

They use it in different applications like UPS, electrical power trains, solar powered street lights, fast charge stations and forklifts.

What are the disadvantages of a lithium titanate battery? ›

Disadvantages Of Lithium Titanate Battery,

Low energy density and high cost. The price of lithium ion titanate battery is high (high production cost and high humidity control requirements), about $1.6USD per watt-hour, and the gap between lithium iron phosphate battery and LTO battery is about $0.4 USD per watt-hour.

Is LTO safer than LiFePO4? ›

Safety: LTO are more thermally and chemically stable than LiFePO4. This means they are less prone to exothermic reaction or electrolyte leakage when overloaded, overheated, or physically damaged.

What are the advantages of LTO battery? ›

Benefits of LTO batteries

All batteries lose charge capacity over their life cycle, but an LTO battery typically loses much less than an NMC. It has a much longer lifespan than any other battery chemistries, which will result in a significantly lower total cost of ownership.

Are lithium titanate batteries good? ›

Excellent fast charging performance

Compared with carbon anode materials, lithium titanate has a higher lithium ion diffusion coefficient and can be charged and discharged at a high rate. While greatly shortening the charging time, it has less impact on the cycle life and has stronger thermal stability.

How much does a LTO battery cost per kWh? ›

Out of the seven variants of LIB in Table 1, currently LTO batteries are the most expensive, followed by LFP, NCA, LMO and NMC. The graphite-anode-based batteries cost around 200-840 USD/kWh, whereas for the LTO-anode -based batteries the cost ranges from 470-1260 USD/kWh[7].

What is the maximum voltage of LTO cell? ›

Depending on selected cathode chemistry the LTO single cell voltage would range from 1.5 Vmin to 2.85 Vmax with nominal operating voltage of around 2.2V to 2.40V.

What is the capacity of LTO battery? ›

Lithium Titanate Oxide (LTO) Cells, Battery Capacity: 500 mAh.

What is the difference between LTO and LFP? ›

LTO has lower nominal voltage of 2.4 V compared to LFP(3.2V) and NMC(3.7V), which leads to a lower specific energy (about 30–110 Wh/kg) than conventional lithium-ion battery(For LFP it is 90-165 wh/kg and for NMC around 270 wh/kg) technologies.

What is the advantage of linear tape open? ›

Linear Tape Open (LTO), also known as the LTO Ultrium format is a powerful, scalable, adaptable open tape format that is optimized for high capacity, maximum storage density and performance.

What are the advantages of flow cells? ›

Flow batteries have a number of advantages, such as easy scalability (capacity proportional to tank size, whereas power output is proportional to PEM surface area), no detrimental effects of a deep discharge, very low self–discharge, low cost for a large system compared to batteries, and long cycle life.

What are the advantages of NMC cells? ›

The NMC batteries have the following main advantages: NMC cells have a longer life cycle, are cheaper, and have a higher energy density. By weight and volume, NMC cathodes contain the most energy.

What are the advantages of cell balancing? ›

Cell Balancing enhances the State of Charge (SOC) of your battery. An imbalance is created when every cell in the connected series of the battery pack depicts a different SOC. Such an imbalance results in the overall battery capacity equal to the weakest cell in the battery pack.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Eusebia Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 5948

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Eusebia Nader

Birthday: 1994-11-11

Address: Apt. 721 977 Ebert Meadows, Jereville, GA 73618-6603

Phone: +2316203969400

Job: International Farming Consultant

Hobby: Reading, Photography, Shooting, Singing, Magic, Kayaking, Mushroom hunting

Introduction: My name is Eusebia Nader, I am a encouraging, brainy, lively, nice, famous, healthy, clever person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.