比亚迪如何让电动汽车充电器几乎与加油泵一样快。
How BYD Got EV Chargers to Work Almost as Fast as Gas Pumps

原始链接: https://www.wired.com/story/how-byds-ev-charger-got-even-faster-and-it-might-not-matter-as-much-as-you-think/

## 比亚迪超快充技术进展 中国汽车制造商比亚迪发布了“闪充”技术,能够在10分钟内为兼容的电动汽车增加超过600英里的续航里程——这比目前“超快充”技术有了显著提升。这些充电器可提供高达1500千瓦的功率,与目前普遍存在的350千瓦充电器相比,大大缩短了充电时间。 这项创新旨在解决续航焦虑,这是潜在电动汽车买家的主要担忧,使充电体验更接近于加油车的速度。然而,广泛应用仍面临障碍。目前,只有比亚迪的Denza Z9GT,并配备了他们最新的刀片电池,才能充分利用这种充电速度。 比亚迪垂直整合的模式——生产电池、汽车和充电器——使其具有优势。他们正在中国和欧洲迅速部署这些充电器,并整合储能系统以减轻电网压力。专家指出,虽然令人印象深刻,但这项技术不会立即改变大多数电动汽车所有者的体验,因为许多车主主要在家中充电。

这场 Hacker News 讨论围绕着一篇 *Wired* 文章,详细介绍了比亚迪在电动汽车充电技术方面的进展,实现了与汽油加油相当的速度。 对话迅速转向关于美国在技术上可能落后于中国的更广泛争论。用户指出中国在能源独立、微芯片生产、人工智能和制造业等领域的进步,以及民众对监控的接受度更高。虽然承认中国面临挑战(人口老龄化、政治体制、人才流失),但许多人认为中国的前景比美国更强劲。 一些评论指责美国的政治势力故意阻碍电动汽车的普及,以保护石油和天然气行业。另一些人指出数据中心建设速度更快,这归功于科技行业内不同的管理结构。最后,有人强调美国禁止比亚迪汽车进入,以保护国内制造商,这一决定与加拿大更开放的态度形成对比。
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原文

Somehow, the whole thing got even faster. Earlier this month, Chinese automaker BYD announced that its Flash Chargers, first rolled out a year ago, can now charge some electric vehicle batteries from around 10 to 70 percent in five minutes, and from 10 to full in about nine. That’s more than 600 miles of range in the time it takes to order a cappuccino and leave a nice tip.

The new BYD chargers can add miles super quickly because they deliver up to 1,500 kilowatts (kW) per charge. Compare that to the 350 kW “hyper-fast” chargers seen more typically in the US, which can top up 80 percent of a battery in 15 to 25 minutes, and the full thing in closer to 40.

BYD’s move brings the charging experience closer to the auto industry's holy grail: comparable to what drivers expect when they fill up their gas tanks. Survey after survey finds that potential EV buyers are worried about range and charging; speeding things up might go some way toward alleviating fears and getting more drivers seriously thinking about the plug. BYD, which doesn't sell in the US because of high tariffs and national security concerns, has built more than 4,000 of the chargers in China so far, with plans to construct some 16,000 more by the end of the year, plus 2,000 in Europe.

There is, naturally, a catch—plus a few reasons to believe that a super fast charger won’t solve all of the world’s charging issues.

Right now, only one car will be able to take advantage of the Flash Chargers’ hyperspeed in Europe: BYD’s Denza Z9GT, due to make its Paris debut next month. That’s because the EV comes with the newest generation of BYD’s Blade battery. Making its own cars, its own chargers, and its own batteries gives BYD a significant leg-up in charging speeds over most global competitors, as the tech works together. (Tesla has also vertically integrated the charging experience.) To charge at such high speeds, the vehicles’ software and wiring need to be built to handle that much electric current.

BYD didn’t respond to WIRED’s questions, but according to Chinese language media, the newest Blade battery uses a lithium manganese iron phosphate (LMFP) chemistry to increase energy density. (The last version used lithium-iron phosphate, or LFP, which trades some energy density for durability and fast-charging capability). BYD says it has redesigned all of its battery elements, including the electrodes that store and release energy, the electrolytes that allow for ion transfer between electrodes during charging and discharging cycles, and the separators that disconnect and then conduct ion flow.

This all ups the battery’s energy density by 5 percent compared to what it touted as the latest and greatest last year. BYD says the Denza Z9GT can hit more than 620 miles per charge. (Real-life ranges tend to be a bit lower than claims by auto companies.)

The charger itself, a slick, teal T-shaped system that evokes—you guessed it—a gas station pump, belies its complexity. Dishing out more than a megawatt from the electric grid is no small feat, both in hardware and construction involved. BYD says it will make the rollout of the new charger a little easier by incorporating them into existing BYD charging banks, so that the infrastructure isn’t starting from scratch. Beyond that, BYD says it will use storage batteries at the charging sites to supplement the electrical grid, so the grid isn’t overloaded.

Despite these impressive speeds, don’t expect BYD’s new system to change the game for EVs. “It's a good, marginal improvement in technology,” says Gil Tal, who directs the EV Research Center at UC Davis’ Institute of Transportation Studies. “It’s not something that changes most people’s daily life.”

The first reason is practical. Today, most US EV owners have access to at-home charging and only use public fast-chargers on the occasional trip that stretches their 250-mile range. For those people, the difference between charging in 20 minutes and in 5 minutes might be close to negligible.

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