I've learnt more about lithium battery charging from my 5.5 years of my e-car than in all the experience of pedelecs,,mainly due to having three charging options as I posted before. As said then, the thing that really matters most is charging speed, though it having low density cells is a benefit for long life.
If you haven't already read it, read that post first
on this link , then read the following:
Having slow charged to full on Monday the reported range available was 164 miles, that still there this morning when I went to use the car.
When I charge to full on the normal so called fast charger, the 164 miles or whatever quickly loses 3 or four miles during the early part of that first run, thereafter losing range and actual miles covered at the same rate.
But it's very different when slow charged, this morning on my identical usual run, it ended with 154 miles range indication and 13.1 miles covered. So rather than ending up with only 161/162 miles of actual range, I had 167 miles, a gain rather than a loss.
It appears that the BMS cuts off earlier when charging at faster rates, the battery filling the most with slow charging. Another indicator of this is that fresh off the slow charger, the car cruises at 20 mph on the flat without any use of the accelerator pedal for over half a mile!
But that doesn't harm the battery life or capacity loss rate.
When I first received the car 5.5 years ago with its promised WLTP range of 168 miles, it would also show about 164 miles fully charged, but with the two reserves totally another 13 miles, meeting the promise. By the summer of year two it would often charge to 172 miles indicated range with the battery fully run in, therefore more than meeting the WLTP figure.
So now after that 5.5 years it's lost virtually nothing, despite well over half of all my charging being slow charging (50% in warm weather, 100% when it's cold), that slow charging filling the cells to the brim every charge.
So from all the combined experience with various pedelecs and the e-car, the magic mix for me to give both long range and long battery life is low density cells combined with slow charging.
The remaining key factor is of course consumption rate, and there the car wins. Setting off in normal urban conditions means the other 40 million vehicles on our roads give me little chance of flooring the accelerator. A pedelec in contrast will be working betwen 80% and 100% nearly all the time when riding.
P.S. In the earlier post linked to above, in a senior moment after typing kW several times I typed this:
"Slow from a 13 amp socket at up to 9kW rate"
Of course that should have been at up to 9 Amp rate, but I can no longer edit that original post.
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