Electric Vehicle Notes
Electric Vehicle Notes
If ℎ𝑤 = ℎ𝑔 ,
Note: Shaded area has reduced – i.e.; the power potential of the engine
is better utilized. Also observe that with more number of gears, we get a
closer approximation of the effective traction hyperbola
Transmission in ICE and EV’s
• Gradeability
• Defined as the grade angle the vehicle can negotiate at a given
speed. Or it may be defined as the max grade angle that the vehicle
can overcome in a given speed range
• Acceleration performance
• Defined as the time to reach a certain speed starting from rest on
level ground
SESSION 3
HEV DRIVETRAIN ARCHITECTURE
BASICS OF ELECTRIC MOTORS
HEV drivetrain
Series, parallel, mixed & complex architecture
Note: Series, parallel, and mixed (“series-parallel”) are shown for single axle propulsion.
Complex hybrid is for dual-axle propulsion – front wheels have hybrid and rear wheels
have electric propulsion. The motor shown between the ICE & the power converter in a
complex hybrid doubles up as a generator as well.
Electric motor basics
• A current through a coil placed in a magnetic field
causes a mechanical device to rotate.
• Reverse the above to get a generator
• Large electric motors have efficiencies of ~90% in
converting electrical energy to mechanical when
the load is matched. If the motor is oversized
efficiencies are substantially lower.
• Smaller motors tend to be less efficient.
Four basic types of motors
• Brushed DC motor
• Brushless DC motor (BLDC)
• Synchronous AC motor
• AC induction motor
AC vs. DC motors
• Stator & rotor
• In AC motors/generators, magnet is on the rotor and current flows
in the stator
• In most DC motors, magnet is on the stator and current flows in the
rotor – hence requires brushes
• Rotation speed
• Rotation speed of DC motors depends on the supply voltage,
offering variable motor speed in a certain range. They can be
designed to rotate at any desired speed for a fixed supply voltage.
• AC motors are constrained to certain rotation speeds
• Torque
• DC motors have strong torque at low speeds – an overloaded DC
motor slows down while trying to push the load. DC motors are
hence useful at low speeds and for varying loads
• Torque of an AC motors drops to zero at zero speed – an overloaded
AC motor just stops
Working of DC motor & AC generator
Notes: 1. The torque out of the DC motor shown above is not steady. To reduce “torque ripple”
(or jerky force), the number of windings on the rotor (called armature) and the number of
magnetic poles in the stator are increased.
Reduction of torque ripple in DC motors
• By adding multiple rectified sine waves, the torque
ripple is evened out to obtain an almost steady
torque as shown below:
Advantages / drawbacks of brushed DC motors
• Advantages
• Cheap
• Essentially disposable - good to power small battery
powered devices such as toys
• Use permanent magnets in the stator (cheaper but
heavier) instead of electromagnets
• Drawbacks
• Brushes wear out fast
• Large current through brushes cause spark as contacts
are made and broken, leading to commutator damage
• Tradeoff between power, speed and repair frequency
• Simple armatures – hence significant torque ripple
Brushless DC motor