Working of Electric vehicle...
- There’s a real possibility that the fuel we’ve been using so far mostly sucked out of the ground will run out.
- There is also the issue of the
byproducts of fuel use that are altering the planet and slowly turning it into
a hostile environment.
- It’s a combination of these two that is slowly pushing the electric vehicle
into prominence.
- Hybrids are effectively vehicles that can run on electricity
either some of the time, or partially and fuel cell vehicles are powered by
electricity generated by the fuel cells in most cases.
- Now, we will focus
on electric vehicles and there working.
- Electric vehicle is a straightforward name for a vehicle that runs only on
electricity.
- What this requires is for each driven wheel to be connected to an
electric motor.
- Electric motor is a machine that converts electricity into some form of
mechanical energy, in our case, the torque to rotate the wheel.
- The most basic
motor has a rotor, which rotates and is the mechanical energy outlet. This is
the end that is connected to the wheel.
- The rotor is housed inside a can called
a stator which does not move but contains windings of wire (electromagnet,
common), or permanent magnets (rare).
- A small but crucial air gap separates the
two. The motor usually has some sort of control unit and many have commutators
that can switch input to output – allowing the motor to function as a generator
and convert mechanical energy into electricity.
- While there are other kinds of
electric motors, the simplest to understand are magnetic motors.
- The stator and
the rotor have magnetic fields when they’re activated and these fields interact
to product a torque between the two.
- The rotor starts to rotate in reaction to
the torque and whatever is connected to the rotor, therefore, rotates too. The
beauty of this arrangement is that it is an extremely efficient system.
- An
internal combustion system only turns about 30 per cent of the energy into
motion while electric motors can hit almost 98 per cent!
- These motors can be installed in a variety of ways. They can be axle mounted
(front, rear or both) and sometimes, they’re mounted directly to the wheels as
well.
- The ECU then decides how it wants the power to spread across the
footprint and a four-motor four-wheeler can be front, rear or all-wheel drive
at the behest of the ECU.
- This arrangement eliminates a lot of the mechanical
complexity that internal combustion engines require. A side benefit of electric
motors is that they make a steady peak torque.
- This gives electric vehicles
startling acceleration from a standstill as well as a very smooth feel when you
drive.
- The problem really, is that electric motors require electricity to function.
Internal combustion uses chemical energy derived from relatively stable liquids
and that makes them self-sufficient on the go.
- Storing electricity has, so far,
proved to be the primary challenge for electric vehicles. Usually, the solution
is batteries.
- Batteries are electricity storage and they can be charged in many ways. Motors
that can reverse polarity can use the rotation of the wheels, when coasting for
example, to charge them.
- They can also be charged by plugging the batteries into
a wall socket. The problem really is that charging car batteries has proved to
be a slow process, taking hours. Imagine if refuelling your petrol car took
eight hours.
- Batteries charge quickly when they’re low on charge but as the
stored charge increases, the charging rate falls.
- Which is why you’ll read that
80 per cent charge is possible in three hours but a full charge requires eight
hours. The next challenge is driving range. Most electric cars today can manage
120-160km of range which is considered suboptimal.
- But the prospect of long
charge cycles creates range anxiety – where owners of electric cars worry
constantly about whether they have enough charge to reach their destination and
then return home.
- Internal combustion has had over a
hundred years to become such an efficient form of transport.
- Electric vehicles
are, relatively, new but battery technology is a hot research area and better
batteries are coming as is better charging infrastructure. And when it does,
internal combustion might be something you see in museums.
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