From Electric Cars to Home Energy Management Professor Dr. Thomas - - PDF document

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From Electric Cars to Home Energy Management Professor Dr. Thomas - - PDF document

From Electric Cars to Home Energy Management Professor Dr. Thomas Brunl Director REV Project, The University of Western Australia Technical Director, WA Electric Vehicle Trial UWA Robotics&Automation Outline 1. EV History and Technology


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From Electric Cars to Home Energy Management

Professor Dr. Thomas Bräunl

Director REV Project, The University of Western Australia Technical Director, WA Electric Vehicle Trial

UWA Robotics&Automation Bräunl 2017 2

Outline

  • 1. EV History and Technology
  • 2. REV Project at UWA
  • 3. EV Trials in Western Australia
  • 4. EVs, Environment, and

Home Energy Systems

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  • 1. EV History and Technology

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Previous Waves of Electric Cars

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Photos: GM, Sony PIctures

Conspiracy Theory 1996-99 General Motors EV1 1900 Lohner-Porsche

wheel-hub motors

1975 BMW LS Electric

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UWA Robotics&Automation

Tesla Model S 2015 Porsche Panamera 2014

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What can I buy in Australia?

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Photos: Braunl, Tesla, Mitsubishi , Nissan, BMW, Porsche

Audi A3 e-tron 2016 Nissan Leaf 2012 Tesla Model X 2017 Mitsubishi Outlander 2014 BMW i3 2014 Porsche Cayenne 2014 BMW i8 2015

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Why Electric Vehicles?

Pros

Zero emissions if charged from renewables Silent at low speeds Significantly cheaper running cost Significantly cheaper servicing cost No (immediate) infrastructure required

Cons

Limited range (~150km) in combination with longer

recharge time (~20min. at DC charger)

à Sufficient for over 90% of drives: daily avg. 39km in Perth à Petrol range extenders available (plug-in hybrid)

Higher purchase price (but lower costs later)

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Battery Electric Vehicles (EV)

Advantages

  • Completely emission free if charged from renewables
  • Very efficient (no excess heat)

Cheap running costs ~0.15kWh/km ≈ 3.6ct/km day-tariff or 1.8ct/km at night Petrol car [8l, $1.50] à12ct/km à factor 7.5 (w/o tax 5.6)

  • Reduced servicing cost
  • Charge from home with clean energy: solar, wind

Disadvantages

  • Higher purchase price than petrol car (initially)
  • Limited range (will go away) in combination with
  • Long charging time (already gone)

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Plug-in Hybrids (PHEV)

Advantage

  • Drive on battery for short distances
  • Drive long distances on petrol
  • Overall low fuel consumption

Disadvantages

  • Expensive (range extender or dual drive train)
  • Small electric-only range
  • Usually no fast-charging
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EV and PHEV Range

100 200 300 400 500 600 700 BMW i8 GM Volt REV Getz REV Lotus Mitsubishi iMiEV EV Trial Focus BMW i3 Mercedes B-Electric Tesla Model S Battery Petrol range ext. UWA Robotics&Automation Bräunl 2017 10

Hydrogen Fuel Cell

What happened to hydrogen fuel cell cars??

  • Meant to be the next car technology 20 years ago …
  • … and are still 20 years away … or may never come

Advantages

  • Convenient filling
  • nce hydrogen infrastructure is in place

Disadvantages

  • Requires expensive hydrogen stations
  • Expensive fuel cells in cars
  • Hydrogen is explosive!
  • Hydrogen expensive to produce and transport
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EV Charging

Photos: Braunl, Veefil

Level 2 (7.7–21kW) Medium-fast charging in parking lots and shopping centres Level 1 (2.4kW) Slow charging at home Fast-DC (50–450kW) Fast charging at service stations Comparison Max:14.5kW

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EV Charging Standards

Photos: Yazaki, RWE

AC Charging

US and Japan

q IEC 62196-2 Type 1 (SAE J1772) q Single Phase, 120-240V, max 70A, 16.8kW

Europe

q IEC 62196-2 Type 2 (“Mennekes”) q Three Phase, 230/690V, max 63A, 43kW

China

q Earlier version of European IEC Type 2 q Three Phase

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EV Charging Standards

Photos: Yazaki, RWE, Tesla

DC Charging

Japan: • ChaDeMo Europe: • Combo Type 2 US: • Combo Type 1

  • Tesla Mennekes

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Battery Swapping

Photos: Better Place, ASBE, Belgium

1899 Battery swapping station in France 1970 Electric van, Hannover, Germany 2010 A Better Place, Israel, now bankrupt Technically feasible, but Will not work because of cost & vehicle design reasons

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Inductive Charging

Convenience Energy loss Magnetic field

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Photos: Halo IPT

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Clean Energy

Source: REUK, GreenPatentBlog, Toyota

250Wp panel = 1kWh/day = 6km per day

EVs are only as clean as the energy you put in!

  • 1. PV on car

Ø Not enough area

  • 2. Wind turbine on car

Ø No, no, no !!!

  • 3. PV/Wind turbine directly

connected to charging station

Ø Not always utilized Ø Not always usable

  • 4. Grid-connected PV/Wind

turbine on house roof

(ideally with local storage)

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Ideal House – Power Generation

1.5kWp Photovoltaic System 6kWh/day ≈ 40km/day

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EV Initiatives

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South Australia: 30% EV/PHEV in Gov. fleet by 2019 (buy 2,000 cars)

http://www.premier.sa.gov.au/index.php/tom-koutsantonis-news-releases/891-state-government-fleet-to-be-30-per-cent-low-emission-vehicles

South Korea: 30% of all new cars zero-emission from 2025 Norway: 100% of all new cars zero-emission from 2025 Netherlands: 100% of all new cars zero-emission from 2025 India: 100% of all new cars zero-emission from 2030

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  • 2. REV at UWA

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2008 REV Eco

Car: 2008 Hyundai Getz parts cost ~$15,000 Motor: Advanced DC, 28kW Controller: Curtis 1231C, 500A Instrument.: EyeBot M6 with GPS fuel gauge driver Batteries: 45 x 90Ah = 13kWh, 144V, 135kg Total weight: 1160kg (petrol), 1160kg (EV) Range: 80km (road tested) Charging: 6h Top speed: 125km/h

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2009/10 REV Racer

Car: 2002 Lotus Elise S2 parts cost ~$45,000 Motor: UQM, Powerphase 75kW regenerative braking Controller: UQM, DD45-400L, 400A Instrument.: Automotive PC (XP) fuel gauge driver Batteries: 83 x 60Ah = 16kWh 266V, 191kg Total weight: 780kg (petrol), 936kg (EV) Range: 100km Charging : 6h Top Speed: 200km/h estimate

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2010&2013 REV Formula SAE-E

q SAE introduced Hybrid League in 2008, Electric League in 2010 q Annual SAE event in Melbourne in Dec. q Sponsor

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  • 3. WA Electric Vehicle Trials

UWA Robotics&Automation

1st Australian EV Trial: 2010-13

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Driving and Charging Portal

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1st Australian Level-2 Network: 2010-15

Charging Network in Perth

  • 23 Level-2 (Type 2) charging bays
  • 1 fast-DC station
  • How much infrastructure

will be required in future?

  • Where do EVs charge?
  • When do EVs charge?
  • How to shift load?

ARC Linkage Project

  • n EV Charging Behaviour
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Trial Results

Driving and Charging q 82% of all charging events happen at only two different locations per vehicle (89% at top three locations)

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Trial Results

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Charging q Results: Peak charging time is 8am-10am with a lower base load from 10am-8pm and very little load during the night

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UWA Robotics&Automation

Trial Results

Charging q Charging stations are often occupied for a full working day, while charging only requires a few hours

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  • 5. EVs. Environment, and

Home Energy Systems

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Environmental and Health

14% of all CO2 Emissions are from Transport

Ø EVs will improve air quality and public health in metro areas

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Beyond Cars

Why stop with clean cars? ! Build green houses!!

  • After 10 years in a car (85% capacity), batteries

can be re-purposed as Second Life batteries for home energy storage

  • After another 10-20

years, batteries can be fully recycled Plus-Energy House, Berlin, 2012

Photo: urbantimes.co

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Beyond Cars

Could we have a power generation that is 100% from renewables?

Problem: Energy Storage Energy is also required when there is no sun or wind

Photos: solar-energy.co.uk, juwi.com

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Beyond Cars

Photos: Synergy/EMC, BYD

Could we have a power generation that is 100% from renewables?

What is the solution?

  • Hydro Dams (Pump water up the hill, see Canada, Scandinavia)
  • Flywheels (Mechanical energy storage)
  • Generate H2 and store for later use
  • Use large battery banks (1MWh in a sea container, e.g. Alkimos),
  • r smaller ones, e.g. 10kWh for home energy usage
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Vehicle-to-Grid vs Home-to-Grid

V2G Idea: Use huge number of EVs as storage to

q Meet peak power demands as spinning reserve q Allow more fluctuating renewables on grid

V2G Problems

q Required infrastructure (2-way charging stations + lots of them: 100x more) q Inconvenience for EV users q Technically feasible, but: Currently limited battery lifetime: $10,000 / 2,000 cycles = $5 “battery wear”

per charge in addition to ~$2 energy borrowed (daytime 10kWh)

Better: Separate home energy storage

Photo: FeaturePics.com, Elektromotive, REV

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Automated Demand-Response

Worst Possible EV Scenario aka “OEM’s Nightmare”

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Automated Demand-Response

Source: Simon Ellgas, BMW 2015

BMW ChargeForward Solution Great for all parties: utility, EV customer, OEM BMW Server

  • 1. Request

power reduction

  • 2. Inform users via app

and give chance to opt-out Power Utility

  • 3. Delay charging for

participating EVs

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  • Prof. Thomas Bräunl

The University of Western Australia Renewable Energy Vehicle Project (REV) http://REVproject.com