JeremyWinter said:
I'm sorry but that person is wrong about leaving the car unplugged.
All electric cars should be left plugged in at all times. Always be charging is the phrase.
That person seems to be talking about the Chevy Bolt. The Chevy Spark EV is slightly different. The Bolt allows you to charge to 100%, but you only charge to 100% when you need the extra range for a long trip. Normally you set the Bolt to charge to 80% only.
The Spark EV never charges to 100%. When you fully charge the Spark EV you are actually only charging to approximately 80% as there is a buffer for the battery at the top of the battery.
Always be charging is the best way to maintain battery health.
JeremyWinter msg_id=1980 said:
Hi, I wanted to let you know that you are misleading people about leaving the Spark EV plugged in at 100%.
The Spark EV never charges to 100%. The battery has a 20% buffer at the top of the battery so it will not degrade the battery to charge to "100%".
The Bolt does not have a buffer and allows you to charge to 100%. Ideally you only do that for long trips and normally set it to 80%.
JeremyWinter said:
Just to clarify, for the Spark EV, charging to 100% will not degrade the battery. The battery has a 20% buffer at the top so when you are charging to 100% you are only really charging to 80%.
The Bolt EV is different as it doesn't have a buffer and allows you to charge to 100%. Normally you only charge to 80%.
Hi Jeremy, I'm "that person" :| . I understand that you've taken the stance that I am trying to mislead people to unwittingly not charge their cars to an indicated 100% over their concerns of battery longevity :lol: . I am aware you have also contacted me with your concern about misleading others in a private message, as well as responding in
viewtopic.php?t=9372 with your counterclaims.
Assuming this isn't a total troll post because it reads as incredible with many details left out, let's take a look at some of your points:
I'm sorry but that person is wrong about leaving the car unplugged.
All electric cars should be left plugged in at all times. Always be charging is the phrase.
Really, all electric cars and at all times? I would love to know your reasoning. Why should people go through the trouble to do that? Is this your answer to a battery longevity concern?
Many owners do not have driveways with plugs to use with an EVSE, nor do their destinations. If they aren't left plugged in, what would you suggest happens to their cars?
I agree that if you can't charge at home, It is a good idea to find a nearby destination charger to maintain your range. However, in this case, the OP has shared their regular weekly usage (25% of the Spark EV's winter range per week) with battery longevity in mind, and they have the flexibility to charge at home.
That person seems to be talking about the Chevy Bolt. The Chevy Spark EV is slightly different. The Bolt allows you to charge to 100%, but you only charge to 100% when you need the extra range for a long trip. Normally you set the Bolt to charge to 80% only.
Why would you assume 'This Person' confused the Spark EV with a different car, in a Spark EV forum, and in a thread about someone's 2016 Spark EV? Was I not clear?
You're right about the Bolt EV, but not all of these cars can do what you say they can do, it's model year specific. It wasn't until after the 2019 model years that the software allowed drivers to set a limit like 80%. Before that, it was always either indicated 100% or 90% with Hilltop Reserve if left to charge on an EVSE.
The Spark EV never charges to 100%. When you fully charge the Spark EV you are actually only charging to approximately 80% as there is a buffer for the battery at the top of the battery.
And what a wonderful buffer it would be! If a car has one, you could do whatever you wanted with it, without consequence, with exception to the Bolt EV, of course
. It could be any kind of buffer, a kWh buffer, an Ah buffer, or even a voltage buffer! It could also be a top buffer or a bottom buffer.
It certainly matters which type it is, but it unfortunately a top-end buffer won't protect you from battery wear to the extent you think it does. Cell voltage, on the other hand, has everything to do with it; a very well-established topic in online literature.
You're right that the Spark EV's 100% is not a Li-ion cell's 100% SoC. 4.2V is typical for the 2015 and 2016's years' chemistry. These cars will, however, charge to a voltage as high as 4.15V at an indicated 100% SoC. There are some reasons why this is not a voltage you want to charge to if longevity is a consideration, despite the "buffer" that exists between 4.15V and 4.2V.
Let's grab some peer-reviewed facts. I'll introduce an essay from a company called AccuBattery
Accubattery is an Android app found in the google play store that is used to monitor and track degradation in various Android phones. I have the app and can attest to its fantastic monitoring tools and data visualization.
Chad :ugeek: at Accubattery discusses four papers that investigate the effects of charging on battery wear.
You can read their essay here.
It is shown that voltage has the most dramatic effect on the battery cycle life. According to their first and second references, for every 0.1V increase above 4V, cycle life is halved as capacity sharply drops.
Figure from Choi 2002: Fig. 1. Effect of CV charge voltage on cycle performance. Test cells charged at constant current at 1C rate to cut-off voltage followed by CV float charging at this voltage for 2.5 h and then discharged to 2.75 V at 1C rate.
Choi et al. (2002): https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378775302003051 said:
Cycle-life is greatly influenced by the charge conditions, but is relatively insensitive to the discharge conditions. High charge cut-off voltages and a long float-charge period at 4.2 V or above have the most severe effects on cycle-life.
Asakura et al. (2003): https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378775303002088 said:
It was found that higher temperatures and voltages accelerate the degradation of the cells: a 15 °C increase in temperature cuts the cell life in half, and about 0.1 V increase in charging voltage also cut the cell life in half.
So it's clear, 4.15V is a high voltage for the Spark EV, and the papers show this chemistry gets stressed and degraded at a considerably faster rate when you charge to 100%.
How about when you charge to 100% and leave it there? Battery University has been a great source of information for all sorts of chemistries, let's take a look at BU-808, one of their pages
https://batteryuniversity.com/article/bu-808-how-to-prolong-lithium-based-batteries
Scrolling down to table 3, we see the effect of keeping Li-ion chemistries at 40% vs 100% at four different temperatures for one full year. This is also covered in Choi et al. (2002) but this is easy to read and reference,
and mostly correct aside from depth of discharge without sources and contrary to Choi.
But I digress, in table 3, it's clear that resting degredation is much higher when a Li-ion battery is kept fully charged compared to one at a lower SoC. 40% is usually meant for safe, long term storage but I'd like to infer that between 40% and 100% there could be a linearly proportional relationship with the rate of degredation. This is quite interesting because it clearly demonstrates heat as the ultimate catalyst for calendar aging capacity loss. At jogail's subzero temperature winters, they can expect the lowest degredation rates in the Winter from dwelling at a full charge. The degredation would be miniscule if it was left for a whole week, and likely a bit slower still at -10ºC. However, come Spring and Summer, they'll experience up to 16% - 20% more degredation than if they held at 40%, and again likely a sliding scale between 40%-100%.
In other words, jogail can get away with keeping the car unplugged with a full frozen battery, but left plugged into the EVSE, if thermal management maintains a warmer pack temperature over extended periods, they will suffer the greater capacity loss rates at those temperatures, and will pay for it in the electricity use to boot :? .
Always be charging is the best way to maintain battery health.
So, troll post? I think we've explored that this is patently false, and these anecdotes and claims have been misinformed, at best, by perhaps newer gen EV owners using cars that have the proper charge management tools. Accelerated capacity loss from calendar aging and charging to high cell voltages are both something that an alleged buffer fails to protect against without any consequence as you use it. You also don't suddenly experience capacity loss when you hit a 'safe' maximum charge of 4.2V either. Degradation is continuous and gradual at all levels.
I would love to hear a source about the Spark EV's 20% buffer and some of what you were claiming, though. I'm genuinely curious where it's coming from. I have heard from somewhere in the past that GM had a strategy to "shift" usable capacity in as the pack degraded, to make capacity fade less noticeable like Apple did with iphones and processor throttling, but I have not seen smoking gun evidence of that from my own monitoring between 350 charge cycles and 800 charge cycles.