Open Innovation in Developing an Early Standardization of Battery Swapping According to the Indonesian National Standard for Electric Motorcycle Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. FACTS and SEM Approach
2.2. Open Innovation Dynamics
3. Research Methodology
3.1. FACTS Approach
3.2. SEM Approach
3.2.1. Structural Model
3.2.2. Measurement Model
- Manifest variable (indicator), which is denoted by X for indicators related to exogenous constructs or Y for indicators related to endogenous constructs;
- Loading factor (λ), which represents the direct correlation between construct and indicator;
- Latent variable or construct (ξ);
- Measurement error, which is denoted by δ for error related to exogenous constructs or ε for error related to endogenous constructs.
3.2.3. Model Evaluation
4. Results
4.1. Outer Model Analysis
4.2. Inner Model Analysis
4.3. Hypothesis Test
- The path coefficient is in the same direction as the proposed hypothesis, which is positive for a hypothesis that says “has a positive influence” or negative for a hypothesis that says “has a negative influence”.
- t-Value ≥ t-table.
5. Discussions
5.1. SEM outer Model Analysis
5.1.1. Convergent Validity of Indicators
- A1 (Battery swap components, such as battery cells, modules, and packs, must have passed the safety test)
- A2 (Standard dimensions of swapped batteries’ size, voltage, and electric current are required at all battery swap charging stations throughout Indonesia to produce equivalent performance and power without making changes or adjustments.)
- A4 (Process suitability of swapped batteries for concurrent use with other relevant products without creating unnecessary interactions)
- B1 (The application of the battery swap test standard is expected to protect the interests of the government)
- B4 (The application of the battery swap test standard is expected to protect the interests of battery swap manufacturers)
- B6 (The application of the battery swap test standard is expected to protect the interests of electric motorcycle users)
5.1.2. Convergent Validity of Constructs
5.1.3. Discriminant Validity
5.2. SEM inner Model Analysis
5.2.1. Collinearity Assessment
5.2.2. Path Value and Significance
5.2.3. Coefficient of Determination
5.2.4. Effect Size f2
5.2.5. Predictive Relevance
5.2.6. Effect Size q2
5.2.7. Hypothesis Test
5.3. Policy Implications
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors | Study Object | Number of Constructs | Number of Indicators | FACTS | SEM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prianjani et al. [25] | LiFEPO4 battery cell standard | 3 | 15 | ✓ | - |
Aristyawati et al. [23] | LiFEPO4 battery module standard | 6 | - | ✓ | - |
Rahmawatie et al. [26] | LIFEPO4 battery management system standard | 4 | 14 | ✓ | - |
Pratiwi et al. [24] | Manual wheelchair standard | 7 | - | ✓ | - |
Nosi et al. [37] | The intensity of e-car purchases by millennials | 6 | 34 | - | ✓ |
Prianjani et al. [39] | Conceptual model framework standardization and testing battery swapping in Indonesia | 4 | - | ✓ | - |
Wang et al. [40] | Public acceptance of electric vehicles | 12 | 43 | - | ✓ |
Globisch et al. [38] | Using the TAM model as an SEM indicator of electric taxi acceptance | 11 | - | - | ✓ |
Zhao et al. [41] | Consumers’ acceptance of electric vehicles | 6 | 27 | - | ✓ |
Adu-Gyamfi et al. [42] | Investigating the adoption intention for battery swap technology for electric vehicles | 7 | 27 | - | ✓ |
Gulzari et al. [43] | A young consumer electric vehicle rental behavioral model | 7 | 27 | - | ✓ |
This study | Development of battery swap testing standards using FACTS and SEM methods | 7 | 58 | ✓ | ✓ |
Stakeholder Requirements | Standard Reference (Adopted from IEC 62840-2:2016) |
---|---|
Protection against electric shock | Chapter 7 |
Equipment constructional requirements | Chapter 8 |
Electromagnetic compatibility | Chapter 9 |
Marking and instruction | Chapter 10 |
Construct | Indicators | Code |
---|---|---|
National uniqueness | Conformity to standardization goals | A1 |
Exchangeability | A2 | |
Diversity control | A3 | |
Compatibility | A4 | |
Increased empowerment of resources | A5 | |
Communication | A6 | |
Security, safety, and health | A7 | |
Environmental conservation | A8 | |
Technology transfer | A9 | |
Reducing trade barriers | A10 | |
Protection of stakeholders | Protecting the government | B1 |
Protecting battery swap R&D | B2 | |
Protecting battery swap laboratories | B3 | |
Protecting the battery swap industry | B4 | |
Protecting the electric motor industry | B5 | |
Protecting electric vehicle users | B6 | |
Protection against electric shock | Standard contains protection against electric shock | C1 |
Standard contains constructional equipment requirements | C2 | |
Standard contains electromagnetic compatibility | C3 | |
Standard contains marking and instruction | C4 | |
Protection against direct and indirect contact | C5 | |
Protection for power supply equipment | C6 | |
SBS charging equipment protection | C7 | |
Direct contact | C8 | |
Protection in battery enclosure | C9 | |
Protection regulations on coupler | C10 | |
Protective measures on energy with high voltage | C11 | |
Protective measures for unexpected events | C12 | |
Control signals on the shielding conductors | C13 | |
Additional protection | C14 | |
Manual reset of circuit breakers, residual current devices, and other equipment | C15 | |
Protection of persons in accordance with standard | C16 | |
Compliance of telecommunications network with standard | C17 | |
Equipment constructional requirements | Compliance with standard | C18 |
Switch | C19 | |
Contactor | C20 | |
Circuit breakers | C21 | |
Relay | C22 | |
Electrical measurements | C23 | |
Clearances and creepage distance | C24 | |
Resistance against mechanical, electrical, thermal, and environmental stresses | C25 | |
Minimum level of protection against mechanical impact | C26 | |
Material flammability and resistance against effects of solvents or liquids, vibration, and shock | C27 | |
Protective coating on the exposed surface in corrosion test | C28 | |
Enclosure stability in dry heat test | C29 | |
External parts of insulating material and parts are subject to heat and fire tests. | C30 | |
Ball pressure test | C31 | |
Resistance to tracking | C32 | |
Resistance to solar radiation | C33 | |
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) | Compliance with EMC requirements of residential location | C34 |
Compliance with industrial sites’ EMC requirements | C35 | |
Marking and instruction | Marked with complete information | C36 |
Legible, durable, and visible marks | C37 | |
Prohibition of plastic usage for markings | C38 | |
Indication of dangerous occurrence using visual signals | C39 | |
Conclusion | Consideration of national uniqueness and stakeholder protection | C40 |
Stakeholder confidence when implementing standard | C41 | |
Sustainability of standard | C42 |
Construct | Number of Indicators | Measurement Model |
---|---|---|
National uniqueness (ξ1) | 10 (X1, …, X10) | X1 = λX1 ξX1 + δ1 (1) X2 = λX2 ξX2 + δ2 (2) . . X9 = λX9 ξX9 + δ9 (9) X10 = λX10 ξX10 + δ10 (10) |
Stakeholder protection (ξ2) | 6 ((X11, …, X16) | X11 = λX11 ξ11 + δ11 (11) . . X16 = λX16 ξ16 + δ16 (16) |
Protection against electric shock (ξ3) | 12 (X17, …, X28) | X17 = λX17 ξ17 + δ17 (17) . . X28 = λX28 ξ28 + δ28 (28) |
Equipment constructional requirements (ξ4) | 16 (X29, …, X44) | X29 = λX29 ξ29 + δ29 (29) .. X44 = λX44 ξ44 + δ44 (44) |
Electromagnetic compatibility (ξ5) | 2 (X45, X46) | X45 = λX45 ξ45 + δ45 (45) X46 = λX46 ξ46 + δ46 (46) |
Marking and instruction (ξ6) | 4 (X47, …, X50) | X47 = λX47 ξ47 + δ47 (47) .. X50 = λX50 ξ50 + δ50 (50) |
SNI implementation (η1) | 4 (Y1, …, Y4) | Y1 = λy1 + ε1 (51) . . Y4 = λy4 + ε4 (54) |
SNI acceptance (η2) | 3 (Y5, Y6, Y7) | Y5 = λy5 + ε5 (55) Y6 = λy6 + ε6 (56) Y7 = λy7 + ε7 (57) |
Criteria | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
Convergent validity of indicators | Loading factor ≥ 0.5 | [58] |
Convergent validity of constructs | Cronbach’s alpha ≥ 0.5 | [58] |
Discriminant validity | Cross-loading with the (average variance extracted) value of a construct and the correlation of that construct with other constructs. The value for each construct must be greater than the correlation value between constructs and other constructs | [58] |
Collinearity assessment | VIF ≥ 0.2 or VIF ≤ 5 | [59] |
Path coefficient | The path coefficient values range from −1 to +1.The minimum path coefficient value is 0.2, and the ideal is more significant than 0.3 to express a meaningful relationship | [60] |
Coefficient of determination (R2) | Square adjusted value ≥ 0.25 | [61] |
Effect size f2 | Large (f2 = 0.35), medium (f2 = 0.15), small (f2 = 0.02) | [61] |
Predictive relevance Q2 | Certain endogenous constructs have predictive relevance if Q2 = 0 | [60] |
Effect size q2 | Large (q2 = 0.35), medium (q2 = 0.15), small (f2 = 0.002) | [60] |
Hypothesis test | t-Value ≥ t-table | Hypothesis acceptance rules |
Construct | Indicators | Loading Factor | Decision | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Valid | Not Valid | |||
National uniqueness | A1 | 0.288 | ✓ | |
A2 | −0.022 | ✓ | ||
A3 | 0.787 | ✓ | ||
A4 | −0.359 | ✓ | ||
A5 | 0.662 | ✓ | ||
A6 | 0.650 | ✓ | ||
A7 | 0.513 | ✓ | ||
A8 | 0.621 | ✓ | ||
A9 | −0.186 | ✓ | ||
A10 | 0.366 | ✓ | ||
Stakeholder protection | B1 | −0.076 | ✓ | |
B2 | 0.563 | ✓ | ||
B3 | 0.852 | ✓ | ||
B4 | 0.026 | ✓ | ||
B5 | 0.716 | ✓ | ||
B6 | −0.112 | ✓ | ||
SNI implementation | C1.1 | 0.876 | ✓ | |
C1.2 | 0.374 | ✓ | ||
C1.3 | −0.114 | ✓ | ||
C1.4 | 0.890 | ✓ | ||
Protection against electric shock | C2.1 | 0.135 | ✓ | |
C2.2 | 0.609 | ✓ | ||
C2.3 | −0.132 | ✓ | ||
C2.4 | 0.647 | ✓ | ||
C2.5 | 0.116 | ✓ | ||
C2.6 | 0.327 | ✓ | ||
C2.7 | 0.028 | ✓ | ||
C2.8 | 0.439 | ✓ | ||
C2.9 | 0.599 | ✓ | ||
C2.10 | 0.734 | ✓ | ||
C2.11 | 0.450 | ✓ | ||
C2.12 | 0.469 | ✓ | ||
Equipment constructional requirements | C3.1 | −0.353 | ✓ | |
C3.2 | −0.005 | ✓ | ||
C3.3 | 0.377 | ✓ | ||
C3.4 | 0.611 | ✓ | ||
C3.5 | 0.589 | ✓ | ||
C3.6 | 0.701 | ✓ | ||
C3.7 | 0.511 | ✓ | ||
C3.8 | 0.214 | ✓ | ||
C3.9 | 0.245 | ✓ | ||
C3.10 | −0.233 | ✓ | ||
C3.11 | 0.533 | ✓ | ||
C3.12 | 0.114 | ✓ | ||
C3.13 | 0.102 | ✓ | ||
C3.14 | 0.172 | ✓ | ||
C3.15 | −0.253 | ✓ | ||
C3.16 | −0.238 | ✓ | ||
Electromagnetic compatibility | C4.1 | −0.765 | ✓ | |
C4.2 | 0.977 | ✓ | ||
Marking and instruction | C5.1 | −0.655 | ✓ | |
C5.2 | 0.361 | ✓ | ||
C5.3 | 0.449 | ✓ | ||
C5.4 | −0.197 | ✓ | ||
SNI acceptance | C6.1 | 0.003 | ✓ | |
C6.2 | 0.640 | ✓ | ||
C6.3 | 0.934 | ✓ |
Construct | Cronbach’s Alpha | Decision | |
---|---|---|---|
Valid | Not Valid | ||
National uniqueness | 0.678 | ✓ | |
Stakeholder protection | 0.586 | ✓ | |
SNI implementation | 0.844 | ✓ | |
Protection against electric shock | 0.648 | ✓ | |
Equipment constructional requirements | 0.628 | ✓ | |
Electromagnetic compatibility | 1.000 | ✓ | |
Marking and instruction | 0.564 | ✓ | |
SNI acceptance | 0.516 | ✓ |
Construct (Latent Variable) | Electromagnetic Compatibility | Equipment Constructional Requirements | SNI Implementation | SNI Acceptance | National Uniqueness | Marking and Instruction | Stakeholder Protection | Protection against Electric Shock |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electromagnetic compatibility | 1.000 | |||||||
Equipment constructional requirements | 0.832 | |||||||
SNI implementation | 0.831 | 0.964 | ||||||
SNI acceptance | 0.542 | 0.561 | 0.886 | |||||
National uniqueness | 0.528 | 0.661 | 0.469 | 0.736 | 0.810 | |||
Marking and instruction | 0.167 | 0.405 | 0.892 | |||||
Stakeholder protection | 0.342 | 0.650 | 0.789 | 0.597 | 0.577 | 0.861 | ||
Protection against electric shock | 0.486 | 0.706 | 0.772 | 0.594 | 0.643 | 0.187 | 0.696 | 0.832 |
Construct | Indicators | VIF | Decision |
---|---|---|---|
National uniqueness | A3 | 1.700 | Valid |
A5 | 1.184 | Valid | |
A6 | 1.421 | Valid | |
A7 | 1.226 | Valid | |
A8 | 1.241 | Valid | |
Stakeholder protection | B2 | 1.048 | Valid |
B3 | 1.526 | Valid | |
B5 | 1.532 | Valid | |
SNI implementation | C1.1 | 2.140 | Valid |
C1.4 | 2.140 | Valid | |
Protection against electric shock | C2.4 | 1.168 | Valid |
C2.9 | 2.080 | Valid | |
C2.10 | 1.203 | Valid | |
C2.11 | 1.972 | Valid | |
Equipment constructional requirements | C3.4 | 2.505 | Valid |
C3.5 | 2.401 | Valid | |
C3.6 | 1.582 | Valid | |
C3.7 | 2.217 | Valid | |
Electromagnetic compatibility | C4.2 | 1.000 | Valid |
Marking and instruction | C5.2 | 1.182 | Valid |
C5.3 | 1.182 | Valid | |
SNI acceptance | C6.2 | 1.137 | Valid |
C6.3 | 1.137 | Valid |
Hypothesis | Path | Path Coefficient |
---|---|---|
H1 | Electromagnetic compatibility → SNI implementation | −0.218 |
H2 | Equipment constructional requirements → SNI implementation | 0.513 |
H3 | Marking and instruction → SNI implementation | 0.244 |
H4 | Protection against electric shock → SNI implementation | 0.384 |
H5 | SNI implementation → SNI acceptance | 0.143 |
H6 | National uniqueness → SNI acceptance | 0.473 |
H7 | Stakeholder protection → SNI acceptance | 0.109 |
R2 | R2 Adjusted | Accuracy | |
---|---|---|---|
SNI implementation | 0.664 | 0.657 | Strong |
SNI acceptance | 0.340 | 0.329 | Medium |
Hypothesis | Path | f2 | Effect Size |
---|---|---|---|
H1 | Electromagnetic compatibility → SNI implementation | 0.121 | Medium |
H2 | Equipment constructional requirements → SNI implementation | 0.513 | Large |
H3 | Marking and instruction → SNI implementation | 0.168 | Medium |
H4 | Protection against electric shock → SNI implementation | 0.283 | Large |
H5 | SNI implementation → SNI acceptance | 0.019 | Small |
H6 | National uniqueness → SNI implementation | 0.301 | Large |
H7 | Stakeholder protection → SNI acceptance | 0.010 | Small |
Latent Variable | SSO | SSE | Q2 = (1 − SSE/SSO) |
---|---|---|---|
Electromagnetic compatibility | 190,000 | 190,000 | 0 |
Equipment constructional requirements | 760,000 | 760,000 | 0 |
SNI implementation | 380,000 | 174,968 | 0.540 |
SNI acceptance | 380,000 | 317,710 | 0.164 |
National uniqueness | 950,000 | 950,000 | 0 |
Marking and instruction | 380,000 | 380,000 | 0 |
Stakeholder protection | 570,000 | 570,000 | 0 |
Protection against electric shock | 760,000 | 760,000 | 0 |
Hypothesis | Path | Path Coefficient | t-Value | t-Table | Decision |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
H1 | Electromagnetic compatibility has a positive effect on SNI implementation | −0.218 | 4.237 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H2 | Equipment constructional requirements have a positive effect on SNI implementation | 0.513 | 9.315 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H3 | Marking and instruction have a positive effect on SNI implementation | 0.244 | 3.097 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H4 | Protection against electric shock has a positive effect on SNI implementation | 0.384 | 7.479 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H5 | SNI implementation has a positive effect on SNI acceptance | 0.143 | 1.636 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H6 | National uniqueness has a positive effect on SNI acceptance | 0.473 | 5.755 | 1.042 | Accepted |
H7 | Stakeholder protection has a positive effect on SNI acceptance | 0.109 | 1.123 | 1.042 | Accepted |
Construct | Removed Indicators | Standards |
---|---|---|
Protection against electric shock | C2.1 | IEC 60204-1:2016 |
C2.3 | IEC 61851-23:2014 | |
C2.5 | IPXXB | |
C2.6 | IPXXB | |
C2.7 | IEC 60364-4-41: 2005+AMD: 2017 CSV | |
C2.8 | IEC 60364-4-41:2005 | |
C2.11, C2.12 | IEC 60364 series, IEC 60479 series, IEC TR 60755:2017, IEC 61008 series, IEC 61009 series, IEC 60947-2 | |
Equipment constructional requirements | C3.1 | IEC 61439-1:2011 |
C3.2 | IEC 60947-3:2008+AMD1:2012+AMD2:2015 CSV | |
C3.3 | IEC 60947-4-1:2018 | |
C3.9 | IEC 62262:2002 | |
C3.12 | IEC 61439-1:2011 | |
C3.13 | IEC 60695-2-11 | |
C3.14 | IEC 60695-10-2 | |
C3.15 | IEC 60112:2003+AMD1:2009 CSV | |
C3.16 | IEC 61439-1:2011 | |
Electromagnetic compatibility | C4.1 | IEC 61000 series, IEC 61851-21-2:2018 |
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Sutopo, W.; Prianjani, D.; Fahma, F.; Pujiyanto, E.; Rasli, A.; Kowang, T.O. Open Innovation in Developing an Early Standardization of Battery Swapping According to the Indonesian National Standard for Electric Motorcycle Applications. J. Open Innov. Technol. Mark. Complex. 2022, 8, 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc8040219
Sutopo W, Prianjani D, Fahma F, Pujiyanto E, Rasli A, Kowang TO. Open Innovation in Developing an Early Standardization of Battery Swapping According to the Indonesian National Standard for Electric Motorcycle Applications. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity. 2022; 8(4):219. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc8040219
Chicago/Turabian StyleSutopo, Wahyudi, Dana Prianjani, Fakhrina Fahma, Eko Pujiyanto, Amran Rasli, and Tan Owee Kowang. 2022. "Open Innovation in Developing an Early Standardization of Battery Swapping According to the Indonesian National Standard for Electric Motorcycle Applications" Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity 8, no. 4: 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc8040219
APA StyleSutopo, W., Prianjani, D., Fahma, F., Pujiyanto, E., Rasli, A., & Kowang, T. O. (2022). Open Innovation in Developing an Early Standardization of Battery Swapping According to the Indonesian National Standard for Electric Motorcycle Applications. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity, 8(4), 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc8040219