Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions

Exposing electric vehicles (EV) to extreme temperatures limits its performance and charging. For the foreseen adoption of EVs, it is not only important to study the technology behind it, but also the environment it will be inserted into. In Europe, temperatures ranging from −30 °C...

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Main Authors: Alexandre Lucas, Germana Trentadue, Harald Scholz, Marcos Otura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/11/10/2635
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spelling doaj-0f8ebd36ebe645e49810b3cce1488b932020-11-24T21:07:28ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732018-10-011110263510.3390/en11102635en11102635Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature ConditionsAlexandre Lucas0Germana Trentadue1Harald Scholz2Marcos Otura3European Commission, Joint Research Centre Directorate C Energy, Transport and Climate, PO Box 2, 1755 ZG Petten, The NetherlandsEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre Directorate C Energy, Transport and Climate, PO Box 2, 1755 ZG Petten, The NetherlandsEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre Directorate C Energy, Transport and Climate, PO Box 2, 1755 ZG Petten, The NetherlandsEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre Directorate C Energy, Transport and Climate, PO Box 2, 1755 ZG Petten, The NetherlandsExposing electric vehicles (EV) to extreme temperatures limits its performance and charging. For the foreseen adoption of EVs, it is not only important to study the technology behind it, but also the environment it will be inserted into. In Europe, temperatures ranging from −30 °C to +40 °C are frequently observed and the impacts on batteries are well-known. However, the impact on the grid due to the performance of fast-chargers, under such conditions, also requires analysis, as it impacts both on the infrastructure’s dimensioning and design. In this study, six different fast-chargers were analysed while charging a full battery EV, under four temperature levels (−25 °C, −15 °C, +20 °C, and +40 °C). The current total harmonic distortion, power factor, standby power, and unbalance were registered. Results show that the current total harmonic distortion (THDI) tended to increase at lower temperatures. The standby consumption showed no trend, with results ranging from 210 VA to 1650 VA. Three out of six chargers lost interoperability at −25 °C. Such non-linear loads, present high harmonic distortion, and, hence, low power factor. The temperature at which the vehicle’s battery charges is crucial to the current it withdraws, thereby, influencing the charger’s performance.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/11/10/2635electric vehiclesharmonicspower qualityinteroperabilityfast-chargers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandre Lucas
Germana Trentadue
Harald Scholz
Marcos Otura
spellingShingle Alexandre Lucas
Germana Trentadue
Harald Scholz
Marcos Otura
Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
Energies
electric vehicles
harmonics
power quality
interoperability
fast-chargers
author_facet Alexandre Lucas
Germana Trentadue
Harald Scholz
Marcos Otura
author_sort Alexandre Lucas
title Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
title_short Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
title_full Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
title_fullStr Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Power Quality Performance of Fast-Charging under Extreme Temperature Conditions
title_sort power quality performance of fast-charging under extreme temperature conditions
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Exposing electric vehicles (EV) to extreme temperatures limits its performance and charging. For the foreseen adoption of EVs, it is not only important to study the technology behind it, but also the environment it will be inserted into. In Europe, temperatures ranging from −30 °C to +40 °C are frequently observed and the impacts on batteries are well-known. However, the impact on the grid due to the performance of fast-chargers, under such conditions, also requires analysis, as it impacts both on the infrastructure’s dimensioning and design. In this study, six different fast-chargers were analysed while charging a full battery EV, under four temperature levels (−25 °C, −15 °C, +20 °C, and +40 °C). The current total harmonic distortion, power factor, standby power, and unbalance were registered. Results show that the current total harmonic distortion (THDI) tended to increase at lower temperatures. The standby consumption showed no trend, with results ranging from 210 VA to 1650 VA. Three out of six chargers lost interoperability at −25 °C. Such non-linear loads, present high harmonic distortion, and, hence, low power factor. The temperature at which the vehicle’s battery charges is crucial to the current it withdraws, thereby, influencing the charger’s performance.
topic electric vehicles
harmonics
power quality
interoperability
fast-chargers
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/11/10/2635
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