How Long to Expect Your EV Battery to Last and How to Extend Its Life
How Long to Expect Your EV Battery to Last (and How to Extend Its Life) GA S REGULAR Menu Lifewire Tech for Humans Newsletter! Search Close GO Smart & Connected Life > Electric Vehicles 27 27 people found this article helpful
Modern EV batteries are in it for the long haul these days, with some electric vehicle batteries guaranteed to deliver a promised range of up to 10 years or 150,000 miles. The latest battery technology is pushing 300,000 miles in laboratory testing. As an EV driver, there are two things you can do to maximize battery lifespan. First, stick with home charging and L2 charging when possible. Of course, you can always use L3 charging stations, sometimes called Superchargers, but it’s best to do this only occasionally to maximize your EV battery’s life. Second, knowing that most SoH damage occurs below 32 °F and over 120 °F, be sure your EV battery’s warming or cooling system is working properly and limit charging on extreme temperature days. How Much Does It Cost to Charge an EV?
How Long to Expect Your EV Battery to Last (and How to Extend Its Life)
They really don’t need replacing very often
By Benjamin Jerew Benjamin Jerew Columbia-Greene Community College Ben Jerew is a journalist and master automotive technician with a degree in Automotive Technology who has written about EVs for a decade. lifewire's editorial guidelines Published on September 27, 2021 Tweet Share Email Fritz Jorgensen/iStock/Getty Images Plus Tweet Share Email Electric Vehicles Batteries & Range Charging & Maintenance Buying an EV EV batteries have come a long way since the early 2000s. If fear of replacing an expensive battery has been holding you back from purchasing an EV, you can let it go. The chances are good these days that you probably won’t ever need to replace your EV’s battery before you’re ready to trade up to a new model.How Long Should an EV Battery Last
There’s one thing all rechargeable smartwatches, smartphones, tablets, and laptops have in common: battery life. It almost feels as if manufacturers make them only to last about 3 years, coinciding with the same time the latest must-have device is released. Many think of electric vehicle batteries in the same light and assume there is the same type of short lifespan, which couldn’t be further from reality. Fortunately, automakers are not building electric vehicles like smartphones. Modern EV batteries are in it for the long haul these days, with some electric vehicle batteries guaranteed to deliver a promised range of up to 10 years or 150,000 miles. The latest battery technology is pushing 300,000 miles in laboratory testing. That’s over 20 years of (generally) emissions-free driving. There are several reasons modern EV batteries last so long. Battery technology is improving all the time, and Lithium-ion (Li-ion) and Lithium-Iron-Phosphate (LiFePO4) EV batteries last much longer than earlier types. Manufacturers have learned how to better manage battery charging and discharging, also called cycling. Today’s battery management systems (BMS) keep EV batteries at the best state of health (SoH) far longer than the old NiCad and NiMH (nickel-cadmium and nickel-metal-hydride) batteries. Tesla, the current leader in EV battery and electric vehicle technology, reports typical SoH losses at just 5% at 50,000 miles. When it comes to EV battery lifespan, you’ve got little to worry about although there are still a few things you can do to maximize it.How to Increase EV Battery Life
There are several factors that determine the lifespan of a rechargeable battery. Physical age, total cycles, charge rate, load rate, and temperature all play a part. Today’s BMS engineers use everything they’ve learned in the last decade to maximize the life of your EV battery and most EV warranties will replace a bad battery at little or no cost to the EV owner. You have almost no control over any of this, of course, but it’s good to know what’s going on under the EV hood, so to speak. Battery SoH and temperature are the biggest factors determining charge rate; that is, how many kilowatt-hours (kWh) you can force into it per minute. Chargers are rated at maximum power output in kilowatts (kW). Home charging stations typically deliver 3.5 kW to 7 kW, but some go as high as 22 kW, and grid-level L2 and L3 battery chargers usually deliver 50 kW to 150 kW, but none of these chargers indiscriminately force the max charge to your EV battery. Instead, the charger communicates with the vehicle BMS to regulate charge rate to maximize battery lifespan and stop undesirable side effects like explosions. On a scorching hot day, a 150 kW L3 charger might lower to 90 kW or, on a freezing day, a 22 kW home charger might throttle to 18 kW. Charging takes a little longer, but the battery will last longer.Modern EV batteries are in it for the long haul these days, with some electric vehicle batteries guaranteed to deliver a promised range of up to 10 years or 150,000 miles. The latest battery technology is pushing 300,000 miles in laboratory testing. As an EV driver, there are two things you can do to maximize battery lifespan. First, stick with home charging and L2 charging when possible. Of course, you can always use L3 charging stations, sometimes called Superchargers, but it’s best to do this only occasionally to maximize your EV battery’s life. Second, knowing that most SoH damage occurs below 32 °F and over 120 °F, be sure your EV battery’s warming or cooling system is working properly and limit charging on extreme temperature days. How Much Does It Cost to Charge an EV?