U.S. Department of Energy: Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

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Plug-in Electric Vehicle Research and Development

Dramatic improvements in plug-in electric vehicle (PEV) performance and cost will require a well-coordinated research and development effort between DOE and America's most innovative researchers and companies. The Vehicle Technologies Office is working with the DOE's Office of Science, ARPA-e (Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy), and National Laboratories as well as industry and academia to develop advanced electric drive components such as batteries, motors, electric machines. DOE is working on everything from fundamental research to applied research to support of early stage high potential, high-impact energy technologies.

Graphic showing relationship between VTO, Office of Science, and ARPA-e in the battery research and development process. VTO and ARPA-E have contributed Generation 1 - Anode: Graphite, Cathode: NCA, Mn Spinel, FEPO4; Generation 2 - Higher voltage and higher capacity cathodes; Generation 3 - High capacity adones like Silicon and metal alloys; Generation 4 - Lithium Metal Systems like solid polymer, lithium sulfur, and lithium air. BES has contributed new battery concepts, new materials, EFRCs and batteries and Energy Storage HUB.

The work of the Vehicle Technologies Office, the Office of Science, and ARPA-e all complement each other, fulfilling different roles in the research and development process. This graph shows how they contribute to innovative battery research.

The Vehicle Technologies Office's robust portfolio is supported by modeling, testing, and analysis. The Electric Vehicles R&D strategy focuses on these three major areas:

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Content Last Updated: 01/30/2013