As soon as possible NMC cells used almost the same third nickel, manganese and cobalt. GM’s current “high-nickel” ultimal cells swappeated that cobalt for nickel when adding aluminum. They use about 5 percent of cobalt and 10 percent manganese, GM battery engineer Andy Oli said that the rest are nickel and aluminum.
LMR cells, however, replace manganese – which is inexpensive and more globally – some pricier nickel and almost all cobalts. They are, OURY said, 60 to 70 percent manganese, nickel 30 to 40 percent, and only 2 percent cobalt.
New chemistry in another type of cell will also use a new module format. The standardized Urban NMCA module for each vehicle was the correct solution to launch its current lineup of 12 separate EV models for GM, its execution said. Moving forward, the company using various chemistry for various purposes: NMCA for high-demonstrations and its most competent models, now LMR for long distances at low cost, and LFP for the least expensive models.
Cheap long distance electric SUVs & Truck
If LMR Chemistry actually produces a cell, which costs less as LFP with greater energy density, it can be a game changer – which includes North American competition against China in the important sector of battery growth and production.
“LMR will complement our high-nickel and iron-phosphate solutions to expand the customer’s choice in truck and full-size SUV markets,” said the vice president of Kurt Calty, Battery, Propulsion and Stability. This, he said, “Take forward the American battery innovation and create employment well in the future.”
In particular, the LMR pack will reduce the cost of some full -size EV trucks and SUV models to bring their prices close to their gasoline counterparts. It is important to increase the sales of full -size EV models, which have not entered the GM’s compact and midcise EV crossover and have not entered the market.


