Smarter Control of Electric Vehicle Batteries
Nano electronics technology is improving the way that batteries and motors in electric vehicles are controlled, giving them a longer range on each charge.
Electric vehicles are fitted with one or several electric motors
driven by energy stored in large batteries that may consist of thousands
of small cells. These high-capacity batteries give current models of
electric cars a range of up to 200 kilometres.
The EU's E3Car project is studying how to utilise battery power as
efficiently as possible in such vehicles. SINTEF is one of 33
participants in the project, which comprise vehicle manufacturers,
automotive industry suppliers and research centres from all over Europe.
The project has taken up challenges on several fronts. Battery
efficiency, higher energy density and power and energy control make up
one group of topics. The infrastructure required for rapid charging or
systematic change of battery is another. And smart dynamic sensor-based
monitoring, where nanoelectronics can provide real-time control, is a
third field of research.
"SINTEF's area is on the nanoelectronics side, and we are putting up
expertise on energy conversion and voltage convertors," says project
manager Ovidiu Vermesan of SINTEF ICT. Together with the Norwegian
companies ElBil Norge and Think Global, the SINTEF project group is
looking at power and energy control in what they call the cars of the
future.
Optimisation
The E3Car project is looking to use microprocessors, ligic circuits
and sensors that will continuously monitor voltage, current and
temperature in the battery pack. Measurements of this sort will allow
certain operations to be cut out and the energy used to power others. If
a sensor exceeds its permitted range, for example, the battery pack can
be disconnected in a millisecond.
"The battery voltage needs to lie around what the motor requires --
200 -- 400 volts. But we can convert vehicle motors to operate at a
lower voltage (100V), which would mean less risk in the event of fire or
traffic accidents," says Vermesan.
Great potential
E3Car is the Largest European research project on the development of
nanotechnology for electric vehicles. The project is still in its very
first phase, and is intended to run until 2012, with a total budget of €
44 million.
SINTEF regards participation in the project as extremely useful, as
the results will be of importance not only for vehicles, but also for
energy consumption in other applications.
"We can envisage a wide range of market and environmental possibilities," says Ovidiu Vermesan
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