EV Battery Research Project Approved

The 25,000-sq-ft addition at the University of Michigan will include three battery laboratories, auxiliary support areas, a substation and a facility for battery cell testing and more.

Ooh2503 Web Img Michigan Ev Battery
University of Michigan

The University of Michigan will move forward with plans to construct a new electric vehicle battery laboratory, broadening research and hands-on education in next-generation battery technologies on the Ann Arbor campus.

The Board of Regents approved the $60 million project at its meeting Feb. 20. Funding will be provided from the state of Michigan contract that established the Electric Vehicle Center in 2023. 

The 25,000-sq-ft addition to the U-M Transportation Research Institute building on North Campus will include three battery laboratories, auxiliary support areas, a substation and a facility for battery cell testing, among other capabilities. The project also includes minor renovations within UMTRI and a new on-site fire hydrant to enhance safety. 

The battery lab will expand on research capacity and opportunity at existing and soon-to-open facilities at Michigan Engineering. The current U-M Battery Lab — the first university-based facility of its kind when it opened in 2015 — supports academic and industry researchers from around the globe.

In April, as a stepping stone to the eventual UMTRI addition, the EV Center will open an 8,000 sq-ft off-campus space that nearly doubles the lab’s size.

That location will house a new pilot line where users can manufacture battery cells at small scales for testing, and an industry-leading automated laser welding system that allows users to assemble and then test battery modules and battery packs composed of those cells.

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