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Xiaomi continues to broaden its consumer electronics footprint with innovations across home appliances, smartphones and vehicles. The new Mi Home Air Purifier 6 debuts a dual-filter, dual-blade design and multi-stage purification matrix promising rapid removal of PM1, formaldehyde and allergens while remaining quiet. Elsewhere, leaks suggest Xiaomi (or a Redmi-offshoot) will push battery capacity boundaries in phones with a rumored 10,000mAh class device later in 2026, reflecting a broader industry pivot to ultra‑endurance handsets. Automotive plans also advance: spy shots of the Kunlun N3 extend‑range SUV hint at Xiaomi’s entry into mainstream electric vehicles under a new sub-brand, reinforcing a strategic push into high‑power, long‑range hardware across categories.
Xiaomi has launched the Mijia Air Purifier 6 Dual-Core Formaldehyde Removal edition, going on first sale May 13 with a retail price of ¥1,936 (some regions eligible for subsidies down to ¥1,348). The unit uses a dual-filter architecture and a dual-fan (double-blade) design delivering up to 11,666 L/min airflow, claiming threefold improvement in formaldehyde removal versus the prior model (99% formaldehyde removal in 2 hours), 99.99% PM1 removal in 1 hour, and stronger particle capture (1.7×). It features a six-stage composite purification matrix—including catalytic and activated-carbon formaldehyde filters, UV sterilization, and antimicrobial layers—plus a closed top, low-noise 26.6 dB(A) operation and increased clean-air throughput.
Xiaomi launched the Mi Home (Mijia) Air Purifier 6, starting preorders with a promo price of ¥1,399 (RRP ¥1,799) and on-sale May 13. The purifier introduces a dual-filter architecture and dual-blade fan design that Xiaomi says doubles airflow and boosts particulate and formaldehyde removal: 99%+ formaldehyde removal in 2 hours, 99.99% PM1 removal in 1 hour, and 98.9% pollen allergen removal in 1 hour. The unit supports up to 11,666 L/min airflow, a six-stage composite purification matrix (including antibacterial, high-density formaldehyde, nano filtration, activated carbon formula, UV sterilization), a closed top design, and 26.6 dB(A) quiet operation. The product targets stronger home air quality with certified performance claims and compact high-power design.
Leaker reports Xiaomi (likely a Redmi sub-brand) plans a late-2026 launch of its first 'ten-thousand-mAh' battery phone: a 7-inch 2K display device powered by a 3nm chipset, 10000mAh+ battery, metal frame, 3D ultrasonic fingerprint, IP68/IP69 water resistance and fast charging. The tipster previously predicted midrange lines adopting 10000mAh packs, 100W charging, large 200MP sensors and Dimensity-class chips; rivals like iQOO and Honor have been linked to similar large-battery strategies. If accurate, this signals a broader domestic push toward very large batteries for mainstream phones, relevant for users prioritizing endurance and for OEM competition/marketing in China’s smartphone market.
Photos of Xiaomi's low-disguised road test reveal its first extended-range full-size SUV, codenamed 'Kunlun N3' and expected to be sold under the SKYNOMAD (寻天) sub-brand later this year. The SUV shows a boxy, rugged profile, sharp front headlights and a prominent lidar bump on the hood; it reportedly will not wear Xiaomi’s main car badge. Prior leaks indicate vertical taillights, water-drop side mirrors and a ‘天地门’ tailgate. Powertrain details point to a range-extender setup paired with a large battery (over 70 kWh-equivalent) delivering about 400–500 km pure-electric range. The model targets the mass market below Xiaomi’s flagship auto brand.