Title :
Review of charging power levels and infrastructure for plug-in electric and hybrid vehicles
Author :
Yilmaz, Murat ; Krein, Philip T.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract :
This paper reviews the current status and implementation of battery chargers, charging power levels and infrastructure for plug-in electric vehicles and hybrids. Battery performance depends both on types and design of the batteries, and on charger characteristics and charging infrastructure. Charger systems are categorized into off-board and on-board types with unidirectional or bidirectional power flow. Unidirectional charging limits hardware requirements and simplifies interconnection issues. Bidirectional charging supports battery energy injection back to the grid. Typical onboard chargers restrict the power because of weight, space and cost constraints. They can be integrated with the electric drive for avoiding these problems. The availability of a charging infrastructure reduces on-board energy storage requirements and costs. On-board charger systems can be conductive or inductive. While conductive chargers use direct contact, inductive chargers transfer power magnetically. An off-board charger can be designed for high charging rates and is less constrained by size and weight. Level 1 (convenience), Level 2 (primary), and Level 3 (fast) power levels are discussed. These system configurations vary from country to country depending on the source and plug capacity standards. Various power level chargers and infrastructure configurations are presented, compared, and evaluated based on amount of power, charging time and location, cost, equipment, effect on the grid, and other factors.
Keywords :
battery chargers; battery powered vehicles; electric drives; hybrid electric vehicles; inductive power transmission; load flow; power grids; battery charger system; battery energy injection; bidirectional power flow; charging infrastructure; charging power level; conductive charger; electric drive; hybrid electric vehicle; inductive chargers; offboard charger; onboard charger system; onboard energy storage requirement; plug-in electric vehicle; power grid; unidirectional charging; unidirectional power flow; Batteries; Bidirectional power flow; Couplings; Magnetic flux; Reactive power; Standards; Vehicles; Level 1, 2 and 3 chargers; charging infrastructure; conductive and inductive charging; integrated chargers; plug-in electric vehicles; unidirectional/bidirectional chargers;
Conference_Titel :
Electric Vehicle Conference (IEVC), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Greenville, SC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1562-3
DOI :
10.1109/IEVC.2012.6183208