A Bristol-based startup has announced a breakthrough in solid-state battery technology that it claims could double the range of electric vehicles while halving charging times — a development that, if commercially viable, would transform the global automotive industry.
Nyobolt, spun out of the University of Cambridge and now headquartered in Bristol's Temple Quarter, has demonstrated a battery cell with an energy density of 450 watt-hours per kilogram — roughly twice that of the best current lithium-ion cells — and the ability to charge from 10 to 80 per cent in just six minutes.
"Range anxiety and charging time are the last major barriers to mass EV adoption," said Nyobolt's CEO. "Our technology eliminates both in a single step."
The breakthrough uses a novel niobium-based anode material that enables rapid ion transport without the dendrite formation that has plagued previous solid-state designs. The company has filed 47 patents protecting its core technology.
Major automakers including Jaguar Land Rover and BMW have entered discussions about licensing agreements. The UK government's Advanced Propulsion Centre has provided £25 million in development funding, viewing the technology as strategically important for Britain's automotive future.








