An electric vehicle (EV), also referred to as
an electric drive vehicle, uses one or more electric
motors or traction motors for propulsion.
Three main types of electric vehicles exist, those that are directly powered
from an external power station, those that are powered by stored electricity
originally from an external power source, and those that are powered by an
on-board electrical generator, such as an internal combustion engine (hybrid electric vehicles) or a hydrogen fuel cell. EVs include ground vehicles
such as plug-in electric cars, hybrid electric cars, fuel
cell vehicles, electric trucks, electric motorcycles and scooters,
electric trains, and electric space rovers; and also electric
airplanes, electric boats, and electric spacecraft.
Diesel submarines operating on battery power are, for the duration of the
battery run, electric submarines, and some of the lighter UAVs are
electrically-powered. Proposals exist for electric
tanks.
EVs first came into existence in the mid-19th century, when
electricity was among the preferred methods for motor vehicle propulsion,
providing a level of comfort and ease of operation that could not be achieved
by the gasoline cars of the time. The internal combustion engine (ICE) has been
the dominant propulsion method for motor vehicles
for almost 100 years, but electric power has remained commonplace in other
vehicle types, such as trains and smaller vehicles of all types.
During the last few decades, environmental impact of the
petroleum-based transportation infrastructure, along with the peak oil, has
led to renewed interest in an electric transportation infrastructure. EVs
differ from fossil fuel-powered vehicles in that the electricity
they consume can be generated from a wide range of sources, including fossil
fuels, nuclear power, and renewable
sources such as tidal power, solar power,
and wind
power or any combination of those. The carbon
footprint and other emissions of electric vehicles varies depending on the
fuel and technology used for electricity generation. The electricity may
then be stored on board the vehicle using a battery, flywheel, or supercapacitors.
Vehicles making use of engines working on the principle of combustion can usually only derive their
energy from a single or a few sources, usually non-renewable fossil fuels. A
key advantage of hybrid or plug-in electric vehicles is regenerative braking due to their capability
to recover energy normally lost during braking as electricity is stored in the
on-board battery.
History
Electric motive power started with a small drifter operated
by a miniature electric motor, built by Thomas Davenport in 1835. In 1838, a
Scotsman named Robert Davidson built an electric
locomotive that attained a speed of four miles per hour (6 km/h). In
England a patent was granted in 1840 for the use of rails as conductors of
electric current, and similar American patents were issued to Lilley and Colten in 1847.
Between 1832 and 1839 (the exact year is uncertain), Robert Anderson of Scotland
invented the first crude electric carriage, powered by non-rechargeable primary
cells.
By the 20th century, electric
cars and rail transport were commonplace, with commercial electric
automobiles having the majority of the market. Over time their general-purpose
commercial use reduced to specialist roles, as platform trucks, forklift
trucks, ambulances,
tow tractors and urban delivery vehicles, such as the iconic British milk float;
for most of the 20th century, the UK was the world's largest user of electric
road vehicles.
Electrified trains were used for coal transport, as the
motors did not use precious oxygen in the mines. Switzerland's lack of natural fossil
resources forced the rapid electrification of their rail network. One of the
earliest rechargeable batteries - the nickel-iron battery - was favored by Edison
for use in electric cars.
EVs were among the earliest automobiles, and before the
preeminence of light, powerful internal combustion engines, electric
automobiles held many vehicle land speed and distance records in the early
1900s. They were produced by Baker
Electric, Columbia Electric, Detroit
Electric, and others, and at one point in history out-sold gasoline-powered
vehicles. In fact, in 1900, 28 percent of the cars on the road in the USA were
electric. EVs were so popular that even President Woodrow
Wilson and his secret service agents toured Washington DC in their Milburn
Electrics, which covered 60–70 miles per charge.
A number of developments contributed to decline of electric
cars. Improved
road infrastructure required a greater range than that offered by electric
cars, and the discovery of large reserves of petroleum in Texas, Oklahoma, and
California led to the wide availability of affordable gasoline, making
gas-powered cars cheaper to operate over long distances. Also gasoline-powered
cars became ever easier to operate thanks to the invention of the electric
starter by Charles Kettering in 1912, which eliminated the
need of a hand crank for starting a gasoline engine, and the noise emitted by
ICE cars became more bearable thanks to the use of the muffler, whichHiram
Percy Maxim had invented in 1897. Finally, the
initiation of mass production of gasoline-powered vehicles by Henry Ford
in 1913 reduced significantly the cost of gasoline cars as compared to electric
cars.
In the 1930s, National City Lines, which was a partnership of
General
Motors, Firestone, and Standard Oil of California purchased
many electric tram
networks across the country to dismantle them and replace them with GM buses.
The partnership was convicted of conspiring to monopolize the sale of equipment
and supplies to their subsidiary companies conspiracy, but were acquitted
of conspiring to monopolize the provision of transportation services.
Experimentation
In January 1990, General Motors' President introduced its EV
concept two-seater, the "Impact", at the Los Angeles Auto Show. That
September, the California Air Resources Board mandated major-automaker sales of
EVs, in phases starting in 1998. From 1996 to 1998 GM produced 1117 EV1s, 800
of which were made available through three-year leases.
Chrysler, Ford, GM, Honda, Nissan and Toyota also produced
limited numbers of EVs for California drivers. In 2003, upon the expiration of
GM's EV1 leases, GM crushed them. The crushing has
variously been attributed to 1) the auto industry's successful federal court challenge to
California's zero-emissions vehicle mandate, 2) a federal
regulation requiring GM to produce and maintain spare parts for the few
thousands EV1s and 3) the success of the oil and auto industries' media
campaign to reduce public acceptance of EVs.
A movie made on the subject in 2005-2006 was titled Who Killed the Electric Car?
and released theatrically by Sony Pictures Classics in 2006. The film
explores the roles of automobile manufacturers, oil
industry, the U.S. government, batteries, hydrogen
vehicles, and consumers, and each of their roles in limiting the
deployment and adoption of this technology.
Ford
released a number of their Ford Ecostar delivery vans into the market. Honda,
Nissan and Toyota also repossessed and crushed most of their EVs, which, like
the GM EV1s, had been available only by closed-end lease. After public
protests, Toyota sold 200 of its RAV
EVs to eager buyers; they now sell, five years later, at over their
original forty-thousand-dollar price. This lesson did not go unlearned; BMW of Canada sold off a
number of Mini EV's when their Canadian testing ended.
Reintroduction
The Toyota Prius, the first mass-produced hybrid gasoline-electric car, was
introduced worldwide in 2001. As of June 2013, a total of 3 million Prius
cars have been sold worldwide in three generations, and it is the world's best
selling hybrid. As of November 2013, series
production highway-capable all-electric
cars available in some countries for retail customers include the Mitsubishi
i MiEV, Chery QQ3 EV, JAC J3 EV, Nissan Leaf,
Smart ED, BYD e6, Bolloré
Bluecar, Renault Fluence Z.E., Ford Focus Electric, Tesla
Model S, Honda Fit EV, RAV4 EV second generation, Renault Zoe,
Roewe E50,
Mahindra
e2o, Chevrolet Spark EV, Fiat 500, and
Volkswagen e-Up!. The Leaf, with 100,000 units
sold worldwide by mid January 2014, is the world's top-selling highway-capable
all-electric car in history.
As of November 2013, production plug-in
hybrids available include the Chevrolet
Volt/Opel Ampera, Toyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid, Ford
C-Max Energi, Volvo V60 Plug-in Hybrid, Honda Accord Plug-in Hybrid, Mitsubishi Outlander P-HEV, Ford Fusion Energi and McLaren P1.
Volt sales in the U.S. reached the 50,000 unit milestone in October 2013, and
with about 70,000 vehicles sold worldwide, the Volt/Ampera family is the
world's top selling plug-in hybrid as of January 2014.
Electricity sources
There are many ways to generate electricity, of varying
costs, efficiency and ecological desirability.
Connection to generator plants
- direct connection to generation plants as is common among electric trains, trolley buses, and trolley trucks (See also : overhead lines, third rail and conduit current collection)
- Online Electric Vehicle collects power from electric power strips buried under the road surface through electromagnetic induction
Onboard generators and hybrid EVs
(See articles on diesel-electric and gasoline-electric hybrid
locomotion for information on EVs using also combustion engines).
- generated on-board using a diesel engine: diesel-electric locomotive
- generated on-board using a fuel cell: fuel cell vehicle
- generated on-board using nuclear energy: nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers
- renewable sources such as solar power: solar vehicle
It is also possible to have hybrid EVs that derive
electricity from multiple sources. Such as:
- on-board rechargeable electricity storage system (RESS) and a direct continuous connection to land-based generation plants for purposes of on-highway recharging with unrestricted highway range
- on-board rechargeable electricity storage system and a fueled propulsion power source (internal combustion engine): plug-in hybrid
Another form of chemical to electrical conversion is fuel cells,
projected for future use.
For especially large EVs, such as submarines,
the chemical energy of the diesel-electric can be replaced by a nuclear
reactor. The nuclear reactor usually provides heat, which drives a steam
turbine, which drives a generator, which is then fed to the propulsion. See
Nuclear
Power
A few experimental vehicles, such as some cars and a handful
of aircraft use solar panels for electricity.
Onboard storage
These systems are powered from an external generator plant
(nearly always when stationary), and then disconnected before motion occurs,
and the electricity is stored in the vehicle until needed.
- on-board rechargeable electricity storage system (RESS), called Full Electric Vehicles (FEV). Power storage methods include:
- chemical energy stored on the vehicle in on-board batteries: Battery electric vehicle (BEV)
- kinetic energy storage: flywheels
- static energy stored on the vehicle in on-board electric double-layer capacitors
Batteries, electric double-layer capacitors
and flywheel energy storage are forms of
rechargeable on-board electrical storage. By
avoiding an intermediate mechanical step, the energy conversion efficiency can be
improved over the hybrids already discussed, by avoiding unnecessary energy
conversions. Furthermore, electro-chemical batteries conversions are easy to
reverse, allowing electrical energy to be stored in chemical form.
Lithium-ion Battery
Most of the electric vehicles used Lithium ion battery. Lithium ion
batteries are environmental friendly and have higher energy density, longer
life span, and higher power density than conventional battery so they have wide
application in electric vehicles and other electronics. Since large number of
Lithium-ion batteries used in series in electric vehicles so there arises the
problems of safety, durability, thermal breakdown and cost, which limits the
application of the Lithium ion battery. Li-ion batteries
should be used within the safe range of temperature and voltages in order to
operate safely and efficiently.
The life span of Li-ion battery
The main component of Electric vehicle is its battery.
Since the price of the battery is very high we can decrease the effective cost
of the battery by increasing it’s life span. According to the research carried
out by the professors of Bar-Ilan University, Israel,
we can increase the life span of the battery by operating only a subset of
battery cells at a time instead of operating entire battery cells
simultaneously, and switching these subsets. The researchers referred to this
process as “Sequential Switching Algorithms”.
Electric motor
The power of a vehicle electric motor, as in other
vehicles, is measured in kilowatts (kW). 100 kW is roughly equivalent
to 134 horsepower,
although most electric motors deliver full torque over a wide RPM range, so the
performance is not equivalent, and far exceeds a 134 horsepower (100 kW)
fuel-powered motor, which has a limited torque curve.
Usually, direct
current (DC) electricity is fed into a DC/AC inverter where it is
converted to alternating current (AC) electricity
and this AC electricity is connected to a 3-phase AC motor. For electric
trains, DC motors are often used.
Vehicle types
The Chevrolet
Volt plug-in hybrid is the top selling plug-in electric vehicle in the
U.S. with cumulative sales of over 50,000 units through October 2013.
It is generally possible to equip any kind of vehicle
with an electric powertrain.
Ground vehicles
Plug-in electric vehicle
A plug-in electric vehicle (PEV) is any motor
vehicle that can be recharged from any external source of
electricity, such as wall sockets, and the electricity stored in
the rechargeable battery packs drives or
contributes to drive the wheels. PEV is a subcategory of electric vehicles that
includes all-electric or battery electric vehicles
(BEVs), plug-in hybrid vehicles, (PHEVs),
and electric vehicle conversions
of hybrid electric vehicles and
conventional internal combustion engine
vehicles.
Hybrid EVs
A hybrid electric vehicle combines
a conventional (usually fossil fuel-powered) powertrain with some form of
electric propulsion. An example of hybrid electric cars is the Toyota
Prius, the world's top selling hybrid with more than 3 million
units sold by June 2013. The Chevrolet
Volt is an example of a production plug-in
hybrid, called an extended-range electric vehicle
by General Motors. The Volt has sold more than 50,000 units in the United
States by October 2013.
On- and off-road EVs
EVs are on the road in many functions, including electric
cars, electric trolleybuses, electric
buses, electric trucks, electric bicycles, electric motorcycles and scooters,
neighborhood electric vehicles,
golf
carts, milk floats, and forklifts.
Off-road vehicles include electrified all-terrain vehicles and tractors.
Railborne EVs
The fixed nature of a rail line makes it relatively easy
to power EVs through permanent overhead
lines or electrified third
rails, eliminating the need for heavy onboard batteries. Electric locomotives, electric trams/streetcars/trolleys,
electric light rail systems, and electric rapid
transit are all in common use today, especially in Europe and Asia.
Since electric trains do not need to carry a heavy
internal combustion engine or large batteries, they can have very good power-to-weight ratios. This allows
high speed trains such as France's
double-deck TGVs
to operate at speeds of 320 km/h (200 mph) or higher, and electric locomotives to have a much
higher power output than diesel
locomotives. In addition they have higher short-term surge
power for fast acceleration, and using regenerative braking can put braking
power back into the electrical grid rather than wasting it.
Maglev trains are also nearly always
EVs.
Space rover vehicles
Manned and unmanned vehicles have been used to explore
the Moon
and other planets in the solar system. On the last three missions of
the Apollo program in 1971 and 1972,
astronauts drove silver-oxide battery-powered Lunar Roving Vehicles distances up
to 35.7 kilometers (22.2 mi) on the lunar surface. Unmanned, solar-powered
rovers have explored the Moon and Mars.
Airborne EVs
Since the beginning of the era of aviation,
electric power for aircraft has received a great deal of experimentation.
Currently flying electric aircraft include manned and
unmanned aerial vehicles.
Seaborne EVs
Electric boats were popular around the turn
of the 20th century. Interest in quiet and potentially renewable marine
transportation has steadily increased since the late 20th century, as solar
cells have given motorboats the infinite range of sailboats.
Electric motors can and have also been used in sailboats instead of traditional
diesel engines. Submarines use batteries (charged by diesel or gasoline engines
at the surface), nuclear power, fuel cells or
Stirling engines to run electric
motor-driven propellers.
Electrically powered spacecraft
Electric power has a long history of use in spacecraft.
The power sources used for spacecraft are batteries, solar panels and nuclear
power. Current methods of propelling a spacecraft with electricity include the arcjet
rocket, the electrostatic ion thruster,
the Hall effect thruster, and Field Emission Electric
Propulsion. A number of other methods have been proposed,
with varying levels of feasibility.
Energy and motors
A trolleybus uses two overhead wires to provide
electric current supply and return to the power source
Most large electric transport systems are powered by
stationary sources of electricity that are directly connected to the vehicles
through wires. Electric traction allows the use of regenerative braking, in which the
motors are used as brakes and become generators that transform the motion of,
usually, a train into electrical power that is then fed back into the lines.
This system is particularly advantageous in mountainous operations, as
descending vehicles can produce a large portion of the power required for those
ascending. This regenerative system is only viable if the system is large
enough to utilise the power generated by descending vehicles.
In the systems above motion is provided by a rotary
electric
motor. However, it is possible to "unroll" the motor to
drive directly against a special matched track. These linear
motors are used in maglev
trains which float above the rails supported by magnetic levitation. This allows for
almost no rolling resistance of the vehicle and no mechanical wear and tear of
the train or track. In addition to the high-performance control systems needed,
switching and curving of the tracks
becomes difficult with linear motors, which to date has restricted their
operations to high-speed point to point services.
Properties of EVs
Components
The type of battery, the type of traction
motor and the motor
controller design vary according to the size, power and proposed
application, which can be as small as a motorized shopping cart or wheelchair,
through pedelecs,
electric motorcycles and scooters,
neighborhood electric vehicles,
industrial fork-lift trucks and including many hybrid
vehicles.
Energy sources
Although EVs have few direct emissions, all rely on
energy created through electricity generation, and will
usually emit pollution and generate waste, unless it is generated by renewable
source power plants. Since EVs use whatever electricity is delivered
by their electrical utility/grid operator, EVs can be made more or less
efficient, polluting and expensive to run, by modifying the electrical
generating stations. This would be done by an electrical utility under a
government energy policy, in a timescale negotiated between utilities and
government.
Fossil fuel vehicle efficiency and pollution
standards take years to filter through a nation's fleet of vehicles. New
efficiency and pollution standards rely on the purchase of new vehicles, often
as the current vehicles already on the road reach their end-of-life. Only a few
nations set a retirement age for old vehicles, such as Japan or Singapore, forcing periodic upgrading
of all vehicles already on the road.
EVs will take advantage of whatever environmental gains
happen when a renewable energy generation station comes online, a fossil-fuel power station is
decommissioned or upgraded. Conversely, if government policy or economic
conditions shifts generators back to use more polluting fossil fuels and internal combustion engine
vehicles (ICEVs), or more inefficient sources, the reverse can
happen. Even in such a situation, electrical vehicles are still more efficient
than a comparable amount of fossil fuel vehicles. In areas with a deregulated
electrical energy market, an electrical vehicle owner can choose whether to run
his electrical vehicle off conventional electrical energy sources, or strictly
from renewable electrical energy sources (presumably at an additional cost),
pushing other consumers onto conventional sources, and switch at any time
between the two.
Issues with batteries
75 watt-hour/kilogram lithium ion polymer battery
prototypes. Newer Li-poly cells provide up to 130 Wh/kg and last through
thousands of charging cycles.
Efficiency
Because of the different methods of charging possible,
the emissions produced have been quantified in different ways.Plug-in
all-electric and hybrid vehicles also have different consumption
characteristics.
Electromagnetic radiation
Electromagnetic radiation from
high performance electrical motors has been claimed to be associated with some
human ailments, but such claims are largely unsubstantiated except for
extremely high exposures. Electric motors can be shielded within a metallic Faraday
cage, but this reduces efficiency by adding weight to the vehicle,
while it is not conclusive that all electromagnetic radiation can be contained.
Charging
Grid capacity
If a large proportion of private vehicles were to convert
to grid electricity it would increase the demand for generation and
transmission, and consequent emissions. However, overall energy consumption and
emissions would diminish because of the higher efficiency of EVs over the entire
cycle. In the USA it has been estimated there is already nearly sufficient
existing power plant and transmission infrastructure, assuming that most
charging would occur overnight, using the most efficient off-peak base load
sources.
In the UK however, things are different. While National
Grid’s high-voltage electricity transmission system can currently manage the
demand of 1 million electric cars, Steve Holliday (CEO National Grid PLC) said,
“penetration up and above that becomes a real issue. Local distribution
networks in cities like London may struggle to balance their grids if drivers
choose to all plug in their cars at the same time."
Charging stations
EVs typically charge from conventional power outlets or
dedicated charging stations, a process that typically takes hours, but can be
done overnight and often gives a charge that is sufficient for normal everyday
usage.
However with the widespread implementation of electric vehicle networks within
large cities, such as those provided by POD Point in the UK and Europe, EV users can plug in
their cars whilst at work and leave them to charge throughout the day,
extending the possible range of commutes and eliminating range
anxiety.
A recharging system that avoids the need for a cable is Curb Connect,
patented in 2012 by Dr Gordon Dower. In this system, electrical contacts are
fitting into curbs, such as angle parking spaces on city streets. When a
suitably authorized vehicle is parked so that its front end overhangs the curb,
the curb contacts become energized and charging occurs.
Another proposed solution for daily recharging is a
standardized inductive charging system such as
Evatran's Plugless Power. Benefits are the
convenience of parking over the charge station and minimized cabling and
connection infrastructure. Qualcomm is trialling such a system in London in
early 2012.
Yet another proposed solution for the typically less
frequent, long distance travel is "rapid charging", such as the Aerovironment
PosiCharge line (up to 250 kW) and the Norvik MinitCharge line (up to
300 kW). Ecotality is a
manufacturer of Charging Stations and has partnered with Nissan on several
installations. Battery replacement is also proposed as an alternative, although
no OEMs including Nissan/Renault have any production vehicle plans. Swapping
requires standardization across platforms, models and manufacturers. Swapping
also requires many times more battery packs to be in the system.
One type of battery "replacement" proposed, vanadium redox battery, is much
simpler: while the latest generation of vanadium redox battery only has an
energy density similar to lead-acid, the charge is stored solely in a
vanadium-based electrolyte, which can be pumped out and replaced with charged
fluid. The vanadium battery system is also a potential candidate for
intermediate energy storage in quick charging stations because of its high
power density and extremely good endurance in daily use. System cost however,
is still prohibitive. As vanadium battery systems are estimated to range
between $350–$600 per kWh, a battery that can service one hundred customers in
a 24 hour period at 50 kWh per charge would cost $1.8-$3 million.
According to Department of Energy
research conducted at Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory, 84% of existing vehicles could be switched over to plug-in
hybrids without requiring any new grid infrastructure. In terms of
transportation, the net result would be a 27% total reduction in emissions of
the greenhouse gases carbon
dioxide, methane, and nitrous
oxide, a 31% total reduction in nitrogen
oxides, a slight reduction in nitrous oxide emissions, an increase
in particulate matter
emissions, the same sulfur dioxide emissions, and the near
elimination of carbon monoxide and volatile organic compound
emissions (a 98% decrease in carbon monoxide and a 93% decrease in volatile
organic compounds). The emissions would be displaced away from street level,
where they have "high human-health implications."
Battery swapping
Instead of recharging EVs from electric socket, batteries
could be mechanically replaced on special stations in a couple of minutes (battery
swapping).
Batteries with greatest energy
density such as metal-air fuel cells usually cannot be recharged in
purely electric way. Instead some kind of metallurgical process is needed, such
as aluminum smelting and similar.
Silicon-air, aluminum-air and other metal-air fuel cells
look promising candidates for swap batteries. Any source of energy, renewable
or non-renewable, could be used to remake used metal-air fuel cells with
relatively high efficiency. Investment in infrastructure will be needed. The
cost of such batteries could be an issue, although they could be made with
replaceable anodes and electrolyte.
Chassis swapping
Instead of replacing batteries, it is possible to replace
the entire chassis (including the batteries, electric motor and wheels) of an
electric Modular vehicle.
Such a system was patented in 2000 by Dr Gordon Dower and
three road-licensed prototypes have been built by the Ridek Corporation in Point Roberts,
Washington.
Dr Dower has proposed that an individual might own only
the body (or perhaps a few different style bodies) for their vehicle, and would
lease the chassis from a pool, thereby reducing the depreciation costs
associated with vehicle ownership.
Other in-development technologies
Conventional electric double-layer capacitors
are being worked to achieve the energy density of lithium ion batteries,
offering almost unlimited lifespans and no environmental issues. High-K
electric double-layer capacitors, such as EEStor's
EESU, could improve lithium ion energy density several times over if they can
be produced. Lithium-sulphur batteries offer 250 Wh/kg. Sodium-ion batteries
promise 400 Wh/kg with only minimal expansion/contraction during
charge/discharge and a very high surface area. Researchers from one of the
Ukrainian state universities claim that they have manufactured samples of
pseudocapacitor based on Li-ion intercalation process with 318 Wh/kg specific
energy, which seem to be at least two times improvement in comparison to
typical Li-ion batteries.
Safety
The United
Nations in Geneva (UNECE) has
adopted the first international regulation (Regulation 100) on safety of both
fully electric and hybrid electric cars to ensure that cars with a high
voltage electric power train, such as hybrid and fully EVs, are as
safe as combustion cars. The EU and Japan have
already indicated that they intend to incorporate the new UNECE Regulation in
their respective rules on technical standards for vehicles
There is a growing concern about the safety of EVs, their
charging systems and their batteries. But EVs must meet all
the same safety standards as conventional vehicles. For functional
safety there are already standards available (ISO 26262
and IEC
61508), as well as for charging systems (UL 2202, UL 2251 or UL
Subject 2594). For batteries, chemical and mechanical components certain tests
and simulations can be performed to validate and certify their safety.
The National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, a U.S. federal agency, opened a
defect investigation on November 25, 2011 after concerns that the Chevy Volt
is at risk of battery fires in a crash. The U.S. House of Representatives is
holding a hearing on the matter in January, 2011. Automotive consulting firm CNW Marketing Research discovered
a decline in consumer interest in the Volt, citing the fires as having made an
impact on consumer perception.
Advocates of EVs are concerned that the focus of the
media and the reaction of U.S. Representative Jim Jordan are unwarranted. The
fires leading to the investigations occurred only during NHTSA controlled
crashes, including simulated rolling of the vehicles. In contrast, 184,000
vehicles caught fire on U.S. roads in 2010.
Advantages and disadvantages of EVs
Environmental
Due to efficiency of electric engines as compared to
combustion engines, even when the electricity used to charge EVs comes from a CO2-emitting
source, such as a coal- or gas-fired powered plant, the net CO2
production from an electric car is typically one-half to one-third of that from
a comparable combustion vehicle.
EVs release almost no air pollutants at the place where
they are operated. In addition, it is generally easier to build
pollution-control systems into centralised power stations than retrofit
enormous numbers of cars.
EVs typically have less noise
pollution than an internal combustion engine
vehicle, whether it is at rest or in motion. EVs emit no tailpipe CO2
or pollutants such as NOx,
NMHC,
CO and PM at the point of use.
Electric motors don't require oxygen, unlike internal combustion engines;
this is useful for submarines and for space rovers.
While electric and hybrid cars have reduced tailpipe
carbon emissions, the energy they consume is sometimes produced by means that
have environmental impacts. For example, the majority of electricity produced in the United States
comes from fossil fuels (coal and natural
gas), so use of an EV in the United States would not be completely carbon
neutral. Electric and hybrid cars can help decrease energy use and
pollution, with local no pollution at all being generated by EVs, and may
someday use only renewable resources, but the choice that would have the lowest
negative environmental impact would be a lifestyle change in favor of walking,
biking, use of public transit or telecommuting.
Governments may invest in research and development of electric cars with the
intention of reducing the impact on the environment, where they could instead
develop pedestrian-friendly communities or electric mass transit.
Mechanical
Electric motors are mechanically very simple.
Electric motors often achieve 90% energy conversion efficiency
over the full range of speeds and power output and can be precisely controlled.
They can also be combined with regenerative braking systems that
have the ability to convert movement energy back into stored electricity. This
can be used to reduce the wear on brake systems (and consequent brake pad dust)
and reduce the total energy requirement of a trip. Regenerative braking is
especially effective for start-and-stop city use.
They can be finely controlled and provide high torque
from rest, unlike internal combustion engines,
and do not need multiple gears to match power curves. This removes the need for
gearboxes and torque
converters.
EVs provide quiet and smooth operation and consequently
have less noise and vibration than internal combustion engines. While
this is a desirable attribute, it has also evoked concern that the absence of
the usual sounds of an approaching vehicle poses a danger to blind, elderly and
very young pedestrians. To mitigate this situation, automakers and individual
companies are developing systems that produce warning sounds when EVs
are moving slowly, up to a speed when normal motion and rotation (road,
suspension, electric motor, etc.) noises become audible.
Energy resilience
Electricity is a form of energy that remains within the
country or region where it was produced and can be multi-sourced. As a result
it gives the greatest degree of energy
resilience.
Energy efficiency
EV 'tank-to-wheels'
efficiency is about a factor of 3 higher than internal combustion engine
vehicles. Energy is not consumed while the vehicle is stationary,
unlike internal combustion engines which consume fuel while idling. However,
looking at the well-to-wheel efficiency of EVs, their total
emissions, while still lower, are closer to an efficient gasoline or diesel in
most countries where electricity generation relies on fossil fuels.
Well-to-wheel efficiency of an EV has less to do with the
vehicle itself and more to do with the method of electricity production. A
particular EV would instantly become twice as efficient if electricity
production were switched from fossil fuel to a wind or tidal primary source of
energy. Thus when "well-to-wheels" is cited, one should keep in mind
that the discussion is no longer about the vehicle, but rather about the entire
energy supply infrastructure - in the case of fossil fuels this should also
include energy spent on exploration, mining, refining, and distribution.
Cost of recharge
According to General Motors, as reported by CNN Money,
the GM Volt will cost "less than purchasing a cup of your favorite
coffee" to recharge. The Volt should cost less than 2 cents per mile to
drive on electricity, compared with 12 cents a mile on gasoline at a price of
$3.60 a gallon. This means a trip from Los Angeles to New York would cost $56
on electricity, and $336 with gasoline. This would be the equivalent to paying
60 cents a gallon of gas.
The reality is that the cost of operating an EV varies
wildly depending on the part of the world in which the owner lives. In some
locations an EV costs less to drive than a comparable gas-powered vehicle, as
long as the higher initial purchase-price is not factored in (i.e. a pure
comparison of gasoline cost to electricity cost). In the USA, however, in
states which have a tiered electricity rate schedule, "fuel" for EVs
today costs owners significantly more than fuel for a comparable gas-powered
vehicle. A study done by Purdue University found that in California most users
already reach the third pricing tier for electricity each month, and adding an
EV could push them into the fourth or fifth (highest, most expensive) tier,
meaning that they will be paying in excess of $.45 cents per KWH for
electricity to recharge their vehicle. At this price, which is higher than the
average electricity price in the US, it is dramatically more expensive to drive
a pure-EV than it is to drive a traditional pure-gas powered vehicle. "The
objective of a tiered pricing system is to discourage consumption. It's meant
to get you to think about turning off your lights and conserving electricity.
In California, the unintended consequence is that plug-in hybrid cars won't be
economical under this system," said Tyner (the author), whose findings
were published in the online version of the journal Energy Policy.
Stabilization of the grid
Since EVs can be plugged into the electric
grid when not in use, there is a potential for battery powered
vehicles to even out the demand for electricity by feeding electricity into
the grid from their batteries during peak use periods (such as midafternoon air
conditioning use) while doing most of their charging at night, when there is
unused generating capacity. This vehicle-to-grid
(V2G) connection has the potential to reduce the need for new power plants, as
long as vehicle owners do not mind their batteries being drained during the day
by the power company prior to needing to use their vehicle for a return-commute
home in the evening.
Furthermore, our current electricity infrastructure may
need to cope with increasing shares of variable-output power sources such as
windmills and PV solar panels. This variability could be addressed by adjusting
the speed at which EV batteries are charged, or possibly even discharged.
Some concepts see battery exchanges and battery charging
stations, much like gas/petrol stations today. Clearly these will require
enormous storage and charging potentials, which could be manipulated to vary
the rate of charging, and to output power during shortage periods, much as
diesel generators are used for short periods to stabilize some national grids.
Range
Many electric designs have limited range, due to the low
energy density of batteries compared to the fuel of internal combustion engined
vehicles. EVs also often have long recharge times compared to the relatively
fast process of refueling a tank. This is further complicated by the current
scarcity of public charging stations. "Range
anxiety" is a label for consumer concern about EV range.
Heating of EVs
In cold climates, considerable energy is needed to heat
the interior of a vehicle and to defrost the windows. With internal combustion
engines, this heat already exists as waste combustion heat diverted from the
engine cooling circuit. This process offsets the greenhouse
gases' external costs. If this is done with battery EVs, the
interior heating requires extra energy from the vehicles' batteries. Although
some heat could be harvested from the motor(s) and battery, their greater
efficiency means there is not as much waste heat available as from a combustion engine.
However, for vehicles which are connected to the grid,
battery EVs can be preheated, or cooled, with little or no need for battery
energy, especially for short trips.
Newer designs are focused on using super-insulated cabins which can heat the
vehicle using the body heat of the passengers. This is not enough, however, in
colder climates as a driver delivers only about 100 W of heating power. A
reversible AC-system, cooling the cabin during summer and heating it during
winter, seems to be the most practical and promising way of solving the thermal
management of the EV. Ricardo Arboix introduced (2008) a new concept based on
the principle of combining the thermal-management of the EV-battery with the
thermal-management of the cabin using a reversible AC-system. This is done by
adding a third heat-exchanger, thermally connected with the battery-core, to
the traditional heat pump/air conditioning system used in previous EV-models
like the GM EV1 and Toyota RAV4 EV. The concept has proven to bring several
benefits, such as prolonging the life-span of the battery as well as improving
the performance and overall energy-efficiency of the EV.
Electric public transit efficiency
Shifts from private to public
transport (train, trolleybus,
personal rapid transit or tram) have
the potential for large gains in efficiency in terms of individual miles per
kWh.
Research shows people do prefer trams, because they are
quieter and more comfortable and perceived as having higher status.
Therefore, it may be possible to cut liquid fossil fuel
consumption in cities through the use of electric trams.
Trams may be the most energy-efficient form of public
transportation, with rubber wheeled vehicles using 2/3 more energy than the
equivalent tram, and run on electricity rather than fossil fuels.
In terms of net
present value, they are also the cheapest—Blackpool
trams are still running after 100-years, but combustion buses only
last about 15-years.
Incentives and promotion
United States
President Barack
Obama has announced $2.4 billion for EVs; $1.5 billion in grants to
U.S. based manufacturers to produce highly efficient batteries and their
components; up to $500 million in grants to U.S. based manufacturers to produce
other components needed for EVs, such as electric motors and other components;
and up to $400 million to demonstrate and evaluate Plug-In Hybrids and other
electric infrastructure concepts—like truck stop
charging station, electric rail, and training for technicians
to build and repair EVs (greencollar
jobs).
Qualifying EVs purchased new are eligible for a one-time
federal tax credit that equals 10% of the cost of the vehicle up to $4,000,
provided under Section 179A of the Energy Policy Act of 1992; it
was extended through 2007 by the Working Families Tax Relief Act of 2004. A tax
deduction of up to $100,000 per location is available for qualified
EV recharging property used in a trade or business.
In 2008, San Francisco Mayor Gavin
Newsom, San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed
and Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums announced a nine-step policy plan
for transforming the Bay Area into the "Electric Vehicle (EV) Capital of
the U.S." Other local and state governments have also expressed interest
in electric cars.
In March 2009, as part of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, the U.S. Department of Energy
announced the release of two competitive solicitations for up to $2 billion in
federal funding for competitively awarded cost-shared agreements for
manufacturing of advanced batteries and related drive
components as well as up to $400 million for transportation electrification
demonstration and deployment projects. This announcement will also help meet
President Barack Obama's goal of putting one million plug-in hybrid vehicles on the
road by 2015.
The American Clean Energy and
Security Act (ACES), which passed the Energy and Commerce Committee
on May 21, 2009, has extensive provisions for electric cars. The bill calls for
all electric utilities to, "develop a plan to support the use of plug-in
electric drive vehicles, including heavy-duty hybrid electric vehicles". The
bill also provides for "smart grid integration," allowing for more
efficient, effective delivery of electricity to accommodate the additional
demands of plug-in EVs. Finally, the bill allows for the Department of Energy
to fund projects that support the development of EV and smart grid technology
and infrastructure.
The House of Representatives passed legislation in late
2008, enumerating tax credits ranging from $2500 to $7500 for EV buyers. The
actual credit varies depending on the specified vehicle's battery capacity. The
Chevrolet Volt and the Tesla vehicles are eligible for the full $7500 credit.
The bill called for the credit to be applicable for the first 250,000 vehicles
sold per manufacturer. The credits were passed in 2008 but went into effect on
January 1, 2009, and can be currently used on the Tesla all-electric models.
The Volt, plug-in Prius, and other PHEVs and BEVs will also be eligible for the
credit when they are released in the coming years. The new credits update
incentives introduced in 2006, that offered credits for gas-electric hybrids,
"Based on a formula determined by vehicle weight, technology, and fuel
economy compared to base year models", which expired after 60,000 units
per manufacturer. The new credits will only apply to plug-in EVs and
all-electric vehicles.
A 2013 study published in the journal Energy Policy
explored the relative benefits of a vehicle-charging network and hybrid vehicles
with larger batteries. Across the battery-capacity and charging-infrastructure
scenarios examined, the lowest-cost solution is for more drivers to switch to
traditional hybrid electrics or low-capacity plug-in hybrid electric vehicles
(PHEVs). Installing charging infrastructure would provide lower gasoline
savings per dollar spent than paying for increased PHEV battery capacity.
In addition, the study determined that current federal
subsidies are "not aligned with the goal of decreased gasoline consumption
in a consistent and efficient manner." For example, hybrid-vehicle credit
is given according to battery capacity rather than electric-only vehicle range.
This has in part encouraged the creation and marketing of vehicles such as the
hybrid Cadillac Escalade, which gets a maximum
of 23mpg on the highway.
Asia
China
Many EV companies are looking to China as the leader of
future electric car implementation around the world. In April 2009, Chinese
officials announced their plan to make China the world's largest producer of
electric cars. The Renault-Nissan Alliance will work
with China's Ministry of Industry
and Information Technology (MITI) to help set up battery recharging networks throughout
the city of
Wuhan, the pilot city in the country's electrical vehicle pilot
program. The corporation plans to have EVs on the market by 2011. According to
an April 10, 2009 New York Times article entitled "China Outlines
Plans for Making Electric Cars" auto manufacturers will possess the
opportunity to successfully market their cars to Chinese consumers due to the
short and slow commutes that characterize Chinese transportation,
and many first time car-buyers are less accustomed to the power of gasoline-powered
cars, subsequently diminishing the hindering nature of lower powered EVs. It
reports that China would like to assist the industry with automotive innovation
by launching a program that worths as much as 10 billion yuan ($1.46 billion).
In the same article, it also reports that the U.S. government is providing $25
billion to help cover domestic automobile makers’ research costs.
In 2010, it is reported that China, aiming to improve air
quality and reduce reliance on fossil fuels, is going to commence a two-year
pilot program of subsidizing buyers of alternative- energy cars in the five
cities: Shanghai, Changchun, Shenzhen, Hangzhou and Hefei. The subsidy will be
as much as 60,000 yuan for battery electric cars and 50,000 yuan ($7,320) for
plug-in hybrids. In 2009, BYD delivered 48 F3DM plug-in hybrids in the country.
China also plans to expand a project of encouraging the use of energy-efficient
and alternative-energy vehicles in public transport to 20 cities from 13. The
chief executive of Nissan Carlos Ghosn said earlier that the auto maker would
likely produce the Leaf, a battery EV, in China if there are
"substantial" purchase incentives offered to buyers.
In 2011, only 8,159 electric cars were sold in China
despite a 120,000 yuan subsidy. Unsubsidized lead-acid EVs are produced without
government approval at a rate of more than 30,000 per year in Shandong
and requires no driving license because the top speed is less than
50 km/h. They cost 31,600 yuan and have been the target of criticism from
major car manufacturers.
Japan
In June 2009, it is reported that consumers in Japan who
purchase an EV like i-MiEV from Mitsubishi can receive
subsidies that reduce cost of the vehicle to 3.209 million yen(about $33,000),
down 30% from the original price of 4.59 million yen ($47,560). At that time,
it is reported the program runs from April 2009 to March 2010. Electric cars,
as well as hybrids, are also exempt from taxes for three years in Japan.
Europe
European Union
Electrification of transport
(electromobility) figures prominently in the
Green Car Initiative (GCI), included in the European Economic Recovery Plan. DG
TREN is supporting a large European "electromobility"
project on EVs and related infrastructure with a total budget of around
€50-million as part of the Green Car Initiative.
There are measures to promote efficient vehicles
in the Directive 2009/33/EC
of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 April 2009 on the promotion
of clean and energy-efficient road transport vehicles and in the Directive
2006/32/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 April 2006 on energy end-use efficiency and energy
services.
AVERE
has a table summarizing the taxation and incentives for these vehicles in the
different European countries, related to state subsidies,
reduction of VAT
and other taxes, insurance facilities, parking and charging facilities
(including free recharging on street or in the parking areas), EVs imposed by
law and banned circulation for petroleum
cars, permission to use bus lanes, free road tax,
toll
free travel on highways, exemption from congestion charging, free or reduced
parking rates, and free charging at charge
points, amongst other initiatives.[91]
In Denmark, petrol cars are taxed at 180% + 25%, however, EV cars (max.
2000 kg total weight) are only taxed at 25%. Free parking is also offered
to EVs in Copenhagen and other cities, and there is free recharging at some
parking spaces.
Denmark
Denmark was planning to introduce a greater number of
battery driven electric cars on the streets — charged on renewable energy
from the country's many wind turbines — ahead of the UN
Climate Summit that descended on Copenhagen in December 2009. A
great deal of the electricity is generated by wind
turbiness.
Finland
The Prime Minister of Finland (2003–2010) Mr. Matti
Vanhanen has mentioned that he wants to see more electric
cars on Finnish roads as soon as possible and with any cost to the
governmental car related tax incomes. Charging at home from motor and cabin
heating outlets (common in all Nordic countries) has been determined to be a
possible load on the grid, although this load is expected to mainly take place
at night when overall demand is lower. If all cars in Finland run totally on
electricity, it will add 7-9 TWh annually to the load, which corresponds to 10%
of Finland's annual consumption. On-line route planners like http://www.uppladdning.nu/ list
a daily growing number of free charging outlets set up by merchants and private
individuals, making it possible to drive an EV for free from Helsinki through
Sweden all the way to Copenhagen.
Germany
"National Electric Mobility
Platform" (NEMP) is a German government initiative to develop
Germany into a leading market for electric mobility,
with about 1 million EVs on its streets by 2020.
As the latest development (October 2010) DBM Energy's
electric Audi A2 completes record setting 372-mile (599 km) drive on a
single charge.
Portugal
The Portuguese Government launched in early 2008 a
national Programme for Electric Mobility called Mobi.E.
MOBI.E is based on an innovative approach to electric mobility.
It has an open-access and market-oriented philosophy and, as a result, it
proposes a fully integrated and totally interoperable system, multi-retailer
and multi-operator model. Rather than a local experience, Mobi.E is deploying a
national electric mobility system. However, the system was designed to be
scalable and used in multiple geographies, overcoming the current situation of
lack of communication among the different electric mobility experiences that
are being deployed in Europe.
Mobi.E allows any individual the access to any provider
of electricity in any charging point explored by any service operator. This
ensures transparency, low entry barriers and competition along the value chain,
with the goal of attracting private investors and benefiting the users,
contributing to a faster expansion of the system.
Therefore, Portugal is one of the first countries in the
world to have an integrated policy for electric mobility and a national
charging network for EVs. By the first semester of 2011, a wide public network
of 1 300 normal and 50 fast charging points will be fully implemented in the
main 25 cities of the country, thus allowing EV users the ability to travel
throughout the country in all comfort and safety.
In the top of the system there is a “Managing Authority”
which acts as a Clearing House and intermediates the financial, information and
energy flows among users, electricity sellers, operators of charging points,
and the providers of any other associated service.
Additionally, several measures were taken to increase the
demand for EVs in Portugal: (1) EVs are fully exempt from both the Vehicle Tax
due upon purchase (Imposto Sobre Veículos) and the annual Circulation Tax
(Imposto Único de Circulação); (2) Personal Income Tax provides an allowance of
EUR 803 upon the purchase of EVs; (3) EVs are fully exempt from the 5%-10%
company car tax rates which are part of the Corporation Income Tax; (4) The
Budget Law provides for an increase of the depreciation costs related to the
purchase of EVs for the purpose of Corporation Income Tax; (5) the first 5,000
EVs to be sold in Portugal will receive a €5,000 incentive fund, and the
Cash-for-Clunkers program grants an additional €1,500 fund if an internal
combustion engine vehicle built before 2000 is delivered when acquiring the new
EV; (6) The Portuguese State did also commit to play a pedagogic role and
defined that EVs will have a 20% share of the annual renewal of public car
fleet, starting in 2011.
Republic of Ireland
In the Republic of Ireland, in 2010, then Green Party
minister for Energy, Eamon Ryan announced a scheme to deploy 1,500
electrical recharging stations for use with EVs. In addition, 30 high voltage
fast charging units will be deployed, providing a high speed recharge facility
every 60 km on interurban routes. Electricity supplied from these
recharging points will be free initially. Additional incentives towards the
purchase of EVs were announced, including a €5,000 capital grant. Series
production EVs have been exempted from VRT. Annual motor tax
for EVs is €104. The Government has set a target of 10% for all vehicles on
Irish roads to be electric by 2020.
Spain
"Electric vehicles are the future and the driver of
the industrial revolution"
—Miguel Sebastián, Spanish Industry
Minister
Spain's government aims to have 1 million electric cars
on the roads by 2014 as part of a plan to cut energy consumption and dependence
on expensive imports, Industry Minister Miguel Sebastián said.
United Kingdom
Plug-in Car Grant
The Plug-in Car Grant started on 1 January 2011 and is
available across the UK. The program reduces the up-front cost of eligible cars
by providing a 25% grant towards the cost of new plug-in cars capped at
GB£5,000 (US$7,800). Both private and business fleet buyers are eligible for
this grant which is received at the point of purchase. The subsidy programme is
managed in a similar way to the grant made as part of the 2009 Car Scrappage Scheme,
allowing consumers to buy an eligible car discounted at the point of purchase
with the subsidy claimed back by the manufacturer afterwards.
The scheme was first announced in January 2009 by the
Labour Government. The coalition government, led by David
Cameron, took office in May 2010 and confirmed their support of the
grant on 28 July 2010. This confirmed that GB£43 million would be available for
the first 15 months of the scheme, with the 2011 Spending Review confirming
funding for the programme for the lifetime of the Parliament of around GB£300
million.
As of September 2012, the following cars are eligible for
the grant: Mitsubishi i-MiEV, Peugeot
iOn, Citroen C-ZERO, Smart Fortwo electric drive, Nissan
Leaf, Tata Vista, Vauxhall
Ampera, Chevrolet Volt, Toyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid, Renault Fluence ZE and Mia
electric. As of 30 June 2012, 1,706 claims had been made through the
Plug-in Car Grant scheme.
Plug-in Van Grant
The Plug-In Car Grant began in February 2012. Van buyers
can receive 20% - up to £8000 - off the cost of a plug-in van. To be eligible
for the scheme, vans have to meet performance criteria to ensure safety, range,
and ultra-low tailpipe emissions. Consumers, both business and private will
receive the discount at the point of purchase.
As of June 30, 2012, a total of 99 claims have been made
through the Plug-in Van Grant scheme. As of September 2012, the following vans
are eligible for the grant: Azure Transit Connect Electric;Mercedes-Benz Vito E-Cell; Faam Ecomile; Faam Jolly 2000; Mia U;
and Smith Electric Edison.
Plugged-in Places
The Government is supporting the ‘Plugged-In Places’
programme to install vehicle recharging points across the UK. The scheme offers
match-funding to consortia of businesses and public sector partners to support
the installation of EV recharging infrastructure in lead places across the UK.
There are eight Plugged-In Places:East of England; Greater Manchester; London;
Midlands; Milton Keynes; North East; Northern Ireland; and Scotland. The
Government also published an Infrastructure Strategy in June 2011.
Buying and leasing
U.S. Air Force
Air Force officials unveiled a plan Aug. 31, 2011, to
establish Los Angeles Air Force Base,
Calif., as the first federal facility to replace 100 percent of its general
purpose fleet with plug-in EVs.
"With gas prices rising and the cost of batteries
falling, now is the time to move toward electric vehicles," said
Undersecretary of the Air Force Erin Conaton. "The 100-percent Electric
Vehicle Base initiative is a critical first step in this direction and will
help guide the way for broader fleet electrification."
Initial planning for the installation of charging
infrastructure at Los Angeles AFB is already underway, and the vehicles could
be in place as soon as January 2012.
As part of the program, all Air Force-owned and -leased
general purpose fleet vehicles on the base will be replaced with PEVs. There
are approximately 40 eligible vehicles, ranging from passenger sedans to
two-ton trucks and shuttle buses. The replacement PEVs include fully -electric,
plug-in hybrid electric, and extended-range EVs.
The initiative would not include force protection,
tactical and emergency response vehicles, which would remain on an exempt
status, according to officials. The program is also subject to environmental
review.
Electrification of Los Angeles AFB's general purpose
fleet is the first implementation step in an ongoing Department of Defense
effort to establish strategies for large-scale integration of PEVs.
U.S. Army
The U.S. Army has announced that it will lease
4,000 Neighborhood Electric Vehicles
(NEVs) within three years. The Army plans to use NEVs at its bases for
transporting people around the base, as well as for security patrols and
maintenance and delivery services. The Army accepted its first six NEVs at
Virginia's Fort Myer in March 2009 and will lease a total
of 600 NEVs through the rest of the year, followed by the leasing of 1,600 NEVs
for each of the following two years. With a full eight-hour recharge, the NEVs
can travel 30 miles (48 km) at a top speed of 25 mph (40 km/h).
General Electric
On November 11, 2010, General
Electric (GE) announced its plans to buy 25,000 EVs by the year
2015. GE's chief executive, Jeffrey
Immelt, said that specifically, the company would convert half of
its corporate fleet vehicles to EVs by the year 2015 in an effort to give the
new technology a jump start along with helping to develop a potentially big new
consumer market for the vehicles. GE told the media that by electrifying its
own fleet, the company will accelerate the adoption curve, drive
scale, and move of EVs from anticipation to action. The company had originally
hinted at this plan in late September.
The details of the announcement were that GE said it will
buy 12,000 GM vehicles starting next year, beginning with the Chevy Volt.
GE also plans to add other different types of EVs as a variety of automakers
expand their electric car offerings and more cars come to the market. Every
major automaker has plans to introduce cars that can be powered by electricity
over the next two years. In addition, GE is hoping that its planned purchase
will help drive down costs by increasing production volumes and assuring
automakers that they will have at least one big buyer in the near future.
Future
Ferdinand Dudenhoeffer, head of the Centre of Automotive Research
at the Gelsenkirchen
University of Applied Sciences in Germany, said that "by 2025,
all passenger
cars sold in Europe will be electric or hybrid electric"
Improved long term energy storage and nano batteries
There have been several developments which could bring
EVs outside their current fields of application, as scooters, golf cars,
neighborhood vehicles, in industrial operational yards and indoor operation.
First, advances in lithium-based battery technology, in
large part driven by the consumer electronics industry, allow full-sized,
highway-capable EVs to be propelled as far on a single charge as conventional
cars go on a single tank of gasoline. Lithium batteries have been made safe,
can be recharged in minutes instead of hours, and now last longer than the
typical vehicle. The production cost of these lighter, higher-capacity lithium
batteries is gradually decreasing as the technology matures and production
volumes increase.
Rechargeable lithium-air batteries potentially
offer increased range over other types and are a current topic of research.
Introduction of battery management and intermediate
storage
Another improvement is to decouple the electric motor
from the battery through electronic control, employing supercapacitors
to buffer large but short power demands and regenerative braking energy. The
development of new cell types combined with intelligent cell management
improved both weak points mentioned above. The cell management involves not
only monitoring the health of the cells but also a redundant cell configuration
(one more cell than needed). With sophisticated switched wiring it is possible
to condition one cell while the rest are on duty.
Faster battery recharging
By soaking the matter found in conventional lithium ion
batteries in a special solution, lithium ion batteries were supposedly said to
be recharged 100x faster. This test was however done with a specially designed
battery with little capacity. Batteries with higher capacity can be recharged
40x faster. The research was conducted by Byoungwoo Kang and Gerbrand Ceder of MIT. The
researchers believe the solution may appear on the market in 2011. Another
method to speed up battery charging is by adding an additional oscillating
electric field. This method was proposed by Ibrahim Abou Hamad
from Mississippi State University.
In addition, the research done by Junqing Pan, Yanbin Qiu, Yanzhi Sun, and
Zihao Wang of Beijing University of
Chemical Technology suggests the possibility of using Silver Cuprate
(chemical formula AgCuO2) to
charge batteries, which could make the charging time as fast as refueling the
gasoline vehicles The company
Epyon
specializes in faster charging of EVs.
Free Software EVs
The Tumanako Project aims to provide open
hardware and software to drive and recharge EVs. Author
Morgen E. Peck covers the project and talks with developer Philip Court.
"The main offering of the Tumanako project is a drive package and inverter
for a 200kW induction motor. This includes all of the software necessary to
take a “go” command from a driver and the calculations for how much power to
feed to the motor. Court says his code works but will not be fully open source
— meaning there are still snippets of proprietary code — for another 6 months
to a year."
Next Generation Lithium Battery
Toyota
Motors Corporation is trying to replace the current Lithium ion battery with solid-state
battery technology by 2020. It has also planned to adopt lithium air battery
technology as a successor of solid-state battery. The solid-state battery will
be three to four times more efficient than the conventional Lithium ion battery whereas Lithium
air battery will be more than five times more efficient than the current Lithium ion battery of same weight.
In solid-state batteries, the liquid lithium electrolyte used in current Lithium ion battery will replace with
a solid electrolyte. Similarly, in Lithium air battery, the lithium cathode
used in traditional Lithium ion battery will be replaced
by an active state of Lithium which interacts with oxygen easily and has
much higher energy density than the current Lithium ion battery.
EV organizations
Worldwide
- The World Electric Vehicle Association (WEVA), chairman Hisashi Ishitani, formed by:
- Electric Drive Transportation Association (EDTA)
- Electric Vehicle Association of Asia Pacific (EVAAP)
- European Association for Battery, Hybrid and Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (AVERE)
- Multilateral Cooperation to Advance Electric Vehicles
- The Implementing Agreement for co-operation on Hybrid and Electric Vehicle Technologies and Programmes (A-HEV) - IA-HEV was formed in 1993 to produce and disseminate balanced, objective information about advanced electric, hybrid, and fuel cell vehicles. IA-HEV is an international membership group collaborating under the International Energy Agency (IEA) framework.
Europe
North America
- East Coast Electric Drag Racing Association
- Electric Auto Association (EAA) (North America) and its chapter Plug In America.
- National Electric Drag Racing Association
- Project EVIE
- Electric Vehicle Technical Institute Inc.
- Inno-VÉ
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