Toyota to use solid-state battery in “high-power” EV in 2027

Toyota is on track to launch solid state batteries (SSB) in a production car by 2028 – and is set to deploy the bold new technology first in a performance electric car.

Toyota is one of several mainstream car makers investing in the development of SSB technology – which has long been viewed as a crucial next step for electric vehicle development, with the potential to significantly reduce the weight and size of battery packs while increasing performance.

SSBs are much more energy-dense than the lithium-ion batteries widely used in EVs today, so allow for much longer ranges while occupying the same physical footprint – and are therefore key to reducing the height of electric vehicles.

Toyota announced its plans to eventually productionise the technology almost a decade ago, and more recently revealed a prototype pack – saying it would feature in a production car in 2027, and be capable of providing up to 745 miles of range.

Giving an update on the programme at the Tokyo motor show, Keiji Kaita, president of Toyota’s Carbon Neutral Engineering Development Centre, said solid-state technology is still considered “very important in the future”, for the significant improvements in usability and durability it offers compared to today’s conventional liquid-based packs.

He added that the firm is “sticking on the schedule” to put its first SSB in a production car in 2027 or 2028, and is also considering commercial vehicle opportunities.

Toyota says SSBs are capable of producing double the power of a current-generation battery, tripling the range and are four times more durable – characteristics that will ultimately define the types of cars they are used for.

“For the all-solid-state battery, the characteristic is high power, compact and long-range”, said Saita. “The cars will leverage these attributes.”

Based on that manifesto, a likely debut model for the new SSB battery tech is the upcoming Lexus supercar – a radical successor to the LFA which is thought to serve as an electric sibling model to the upcoming, V8-engined Toyota GR supercar. Its ultra-low silhouette and promise of super-fast performance would make it a logical beneficiary of the new batteries.

However, asked for clues as to the identity of the first solid-state car, Kaita would only say: “Whether it will be a Lexus or Toyota, we will leave that to your imagination.”

Another important factor in Toyota’s development of SSP is the significant implications it could have for reducing the environmental impact of BEVs.

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