GM announces lithium metal battery JV | Automotive Industry News

With GM’s next-generation lithium metal batteries, the expected energy density increase could enable higher range in a similarly sized pack or comparable range in a smaller pack. The weight and space savings from smaller battery packs could help with vehicle lightweighting or create more room for additional technology

General Motors president Mark Reuss has announced a joint development agreement with lithium metal battery innovator SolidEnergy Systems.

The automaker’s lithium metal battery with a protected anode will feature a combination of affordability, high performance and energy density. The initial prototype batteries have already completed 150,000 simulated test miles at research and development labs at GM’s Global Technical Center in Warren, Michigan, demonstrating real world potential.

To accelerate Li-Metal battery commercialisation, GM said it was working with several innovative companies and making investments that will allow the company to scale quickly.

GM Ventures was an early investor six years ago in SES, a research, development and manufacturing leader of Li-Metal technology and AI-powered battery management software to optimise performance and safety. The 2015 investment was the start of a close working relationship between SES and General Motors’ research and development organisation. 

The new joint development agreement is the next progression of that ongoing collaboration. As part of the agreement, GM and SES plan to build a manufacturing prototyping line in Woburn, Massachusetts, for a high-capacity, pre-production battery by 2023.

“Affordability and range are two major barriers to mass EV adoption,” said Reuss. “With this next-generation Ultium chemistry, we believe we’re on the cusp of a once-in-a-generation improvement in energy density and cost. There’s even more room to improve in both categories, and we intend to innovate faster than any other company in this space.”

The expected battery energy density increase could enable higher range in a similarly sized pack or comparable range in a smaller pack. The weight and space savings from smaller battery packs could help with vehicle lightweighting or create more room for additional technology.

Part of the foundation of GM and SES’ collaboration on Li-Metal prototype batteries is GM’s extensive lithium metal battery experience. The company’s expertise in this field has resulted in 49 patents granted and 45 patents pending. SES will also bring its own lithium metal intellectual property to the collaboration.

GM announced this rapid technical progress for possible use in future Ultium-based vehicles just one year after the reveal of the first-generation Ultium Platform. The first Ultium-based products are expected to go on sale later this year.

“The Ultium platform was actually designed and built with change like this in mind,” Kent Helfrich, GM’s executive director of global electrification and battery systems, told CNBC. “We know battery technology changes really fast … so we had to build that type of flexibility and bandwidth into our platform.”

Officials declined to disclose financial details of the tie-up to CNBC. The amount invested in SolidEnergy Systems in 2015 was not disclosed, either.

In 2019, GM announced the formation of Ultium Cells, a joint venture with LG Energy Solution to mass-produce battery cells in Ohio for future battery-electric vehicles. Construction is currently under way at the facility.

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