DocumentCode
2476736
Title
The next generation automotive electrical power system architecture: issues and challenges
Author
Miller, John M. ; Nicastri, Paul R.
Author_Institution
Sci. Res. Lab., Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, MI, USA
Volume
2
fYear
1998
fDate
31 Oct-7 Nov 1998
Abstract
The electrical and electronic content of contemporary passenger cars and light trucks now exceeds 20% of the vehicle cost. Semiconductor content alone is growing at 16%/yr, primarily in embedded microcontrollers, safety and security systems and entertainment systems. As the automobile develops, the demand for installed capacity to support future electronic and anciliary functions is expected to exceed the historical 4%/yr. Today, the automobile electrical system consumes approximately 1.2 kW to support essential loads. With electrical ancillaries, like power assisted steering, the demand will grow to 3 kW and higher in the near term (10 to 15 years). Meeting this predicted demand in a low voltage system is one issue facing automotive electrical system design today. The challenge lies in how to meet such future demand at affordable cost and uncompromised quality. This paper summarizes candidate electrical architectures that are considered viable alternatives to today´s system
Keywords
automobiles; power systems; 1.2 to 3 kW; automotive electrical power system; electrical ancillaries; electrical architectures; embedded microcontrollers; entertainment systems; light trucks; low voltage system; passenger cars; power system architecture; security systems; Automobiles; Automotive engineering; Costs; Low voltage; Microcontrollers; Power steering; Power system security; Power systems; Safety; Vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 1998. Proceedings., 17th DASC. The AIAA/IEEE/SAE
Conference_Location
Bellevue, WA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5086-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.1998.739866
Filename
739866
Link To Document