कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
THE POSITIVES AND NEGATIVES OF EV BATTERIES
Auto Express
|June 04, 2025
EV TECH EXPLAINED

EV technology is definitely here to stay, but despite plug-in cars become increasingly common, the tech that powers them remains something of a mystery, with manufacturers offering very little explanation as to exactly how electricity from a plug socket is stored in your car and subsequently consumed and transformed into kinetic energy via the electric motors.
To find out more, we visited Porsche's battery development centre in Weissach, Germany, to speak to its experts and help demystify battery jargon.
HOW DO EV BATTERIES WORK?
MOST electric car batteries are of the lithium ion variety, which is essentially a much larger version of the type found in your smartphone. A battery pack comprises several different modules, which contain a variety of cells; the Porsche Taycan’s 93kWh Performance Battery Plus, for example, has 33 modules, each accommodating 12 cells.
Each cell has a positive ‘cathode’ and a negative ‘anode’; the former is made from either Lithium Nickel Manganese Cobalt Oxide (NMC) or Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP), while the latter is usually made from graphite. These are split by a non-conductive separator, with a liquid ‘electrolyte’ solution surrounding it all, enabling lithium ions to be transferred between the positive and negative ends.
When the car is charging, lithium ions flow through the cabling and, in the case of pouch-style batteries such as the ones used by Porsche, inside via metallic tabs. These are funnelled into the anode and then, thanks to the presence of electrolytes, through the separator and into the cathode, where they are stored. When the car is discharging energy, the opposite will occur, with lithium ions travelling from the cathode to the anode and through cabling onto the electric motor.
LFP VS NMC
यह कहानी Auto Express के June 04, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 9,500 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Auto Express से और कहानियाँ

Auto Express
ALL CHANGE?
Things don't stand still in the world of EVs, and Skoda's Enyaq and Toyota's bZ4X have both been updated. We put them to the test
17 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
WINTER TYRE TEST 2025
Our testers warmed to the task of finding the best cold-weather rubber for your car
12 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
OFFICIAL NEW RENAULT CLIO
REVEALED Sixth generation of small hatch has been revealed, and will arrive in the UK in 2027
5 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
HONDA CIVIC TYPE R
Civic Type R is as fun as expected, but with some irritating technology
2 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
MercedesAMG GT 55
FIRST DRIVE With no hybrid assistance for its V8, does this edition of the new Porsche 911 rival prove that less is more?
4 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
Polestar 5 ready to take on the Taycan
OFFICIAL Swedish brand is gunning for Porsche with high-performance GT
2 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
Audi A6 Avant
FIRST UK DRIVE Brand's new premium estate ticks most of the right boxes - unless you want to pack in loads of boxes
4 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
BYD Seal 6 DM - i
FIRST DRIVE BYD may be renowned as a manufacturer of EVs, but it hand to plug - in hybrid as well
5 mins
September 10, 2025

Auto Express
USED BUYER'S GUIDE Porsche Taycan
FROM £35,000 You'll pay a premium for a Taycan, but Porsche got it right with its first electric car. That makes the German EV easy to recommend as a used purchase
3 mins
September 10, 2025
Auto Express
BUYING CARS
I KNOW that “don’t be afraid to try new things” sounds like a phrase parents say to picky kids while trying to feed them something not dinosaur-shaped, or perhaps by your partner when they buy you a tandem bike as an anniversary gift. But it’s also an idea worth bearing in mind when choosing your next car.
1 mins
September 10, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size