MIT Technology Review Subscribe

Hyundai Bets on Lithium-Ion Batteries

The 2011 Sonata Hybrid will be the first mass-market car to use the battery technology.

In December, Hyundai will launch the 2011 Sonata Hybrid, the world’s first mass-market hybrid with a lithium-ion battery pack. Lithium cells provide much higher energy density than the conventional nickel-metal-hydride packs currently used in hybrids. As a result, the 1.6-kilowatt-hour pack weighs 96 pounds-compared to the 124 pounds of the 1.4-kilowatt-hour packs in Toyota hybrids.

Charging ahead: Hyundai’s hybrid sedan, which it will start selling in December, will feature a lithium-ion battery–a technology that Toyota has said isn’t ready for mass-market cars.

If early specs are any indication, the Sonata Hybrid promises to offer strong competition for the Ford Fusion Hybrid and the Toyota Camry Hybrid, which, like the Sonata Hybrid, are midsize hybrid sedans that were adapted from gasoline-engine equivalents. (The Prius, in contrast, has no nonhybrid equivalent). Noting that government data shows that U.S. drivers spend more than half their time on the highway, Hyundai has tuned its hybrid for better highway mileage than either of its hybrid competitors. The company says its hybrid car will get 37 miles per gallon in the city and 39 or 40 mpg on the highway. The Fusion Hybrid gets 41 mpg city but only 36 mpg highway; the Camry Hybrid gets 33 mpg city, 34 mpg highway. Hyundai also claims that the hybrid Sonata will run in electric mode as high as 62 miles per hour under certain circumstances–versus the Fusion’s 47 mph and the Camry’s 42 mph.

Advertisement

The Korean company expects to pull this off using a simpler hybrid system than either Toyota or Ford. Hyundai uses a 30-kilowatt electric motor between the 169-horsepower, 2.4-liter gasoline engine and a six-speed automatic transmission. Inside the transmission, an electric oil pump replaces the torque-converter pump. This pump keeps fluid pressure up even when the engine switches off at stops, which removes the engine-idle input torque that normally powers the torque converter to keep it ready to transmit power on acceleration.. There’s also a smaller 8.5-kilowatt starter-generator that restarts the engine when it switches off, and can add a small amount of additional battery recharging.

This story is only available to subscribers.

Don’t settle for half the story.
Get paywall-free access to technology news for the here and now.

Subscribe now Already a subscriber? Sign in
You’ve read all your free stories.

MIT Technology Review provides an intelligent and independent filter for the flood of information about technology.

Subscribe now Already a subscriber? Sign in

The electric motor can power the car alone, and can also recharge the battery and assist the engine with additional torque.

Hyundai has fitted the Sonata Hybrid with its own front styling from the windshield forward. “Consumers who buy a hybrid want to get credit for taking that step,” says Sonata Hybrid product manager Michael Deitz. “If you have minimal differentiation, it doesn’t give them that.” He notes that Hyundai wanted to keep the Sonata’s most recognizable design aspect–its swooping side profile–and avoid the expense of a totally new vehicle, a la Prius. “But the face of the car is completely different.”

Hyundai hasn’t released pricing for the 2011 Sonata Hybrid yet, but if the company can “get it to market under $25,000,” Deitz says, “it will definitely have a good impact.” Depending on options, he says the hybrid should run “from the mid-20s to the low 30s.” In contrast, the 2011 Toyota Camry Hybrid starts at $26,400, and the 2011 Ford Fusion Hybrid starts at $28,100.

“It’s an extremely intriguing entry,” says Aaron Bragman, from industry analysis firm IHS Automotive. “If it proves as good a hybrid as the regular Sonata is good as a family sedan, it could do very well.” He also notes that the car could prove “an embarrassment” to Toyota, which has said repeatedly that lithium-ion-cell technology is not yet ready for mass usage in hybrids.

This is your last free story.
Sign in Subscribe now

Your daily newsletter about what’s up in emerging technology from MIT Technology Review.

Please, enter a valid email.
Privacy Policy
Submitting...
There was an error submitting the request.
Thanks for signing up!

Our most popular stories

Advertisement