https://cleantechnica.com/2015/10/24/hidden-benefits-evs-regeneration/
The Hidden Benefits of EVs – Regeneration
October 24th, 2015  Kyle Field 

[images  / Michael Goodman, uOregon.edu
http://zebu.uoregon.edu/disted/ph162/l10h.html
Regeneration Simplified

https://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/10/2015-Leaf-Infinite-Mileage-570x322.jpg
Leaf Infinite Mileage

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/10/EV-charging-Santa-Monica.jpg
EV charging Santa Monica
]

We spend a lot of time here on CleanTechnica discussing the many benefits of
EVs but there’s one specific benefit that really surprised me –
regeneration. At its core, regeneration is utilizing an onboard generator
(usually the primary drive motor) to slow the car and convert that power
back to electricity… but in practice, it’s much more than that and can have
a large impact on the range of your EV if you know how to use it most
effectively ...

A 2014 study [
http://www.sersc.org/journals/IJCA/vol7_no12/20.pdf
] noted:

Regenerative braking is an efficient approach to extend the driving range of
the EV without any additional cost; at the same time, it plays an important
role in energy saving. Recently, many efforts have been focused on
developing models of the regenerative braking system and improving brake
performance.

Studies across the board cite regeneration as providing 10–15% of the
expended energy back, which, with the range of today’s EVs, can mean the
difference between making it to your destination or having to stop and
recharge.

How Does Regen Work?
You have expended battery power to get the car moving (building up kinetic
energy) and you need to stop, so you ease onto the brakes. Behind the
scenes, as you step on the brake pedal (maybe we should rename it the
“decelerator”?) the car engages the motor backwards to slow the car down
and, at the same time, generates power.

A Practical Study
It seems simple and really, it is but it can have a huge impact on your
range and also reveals many hidden inefficiencies of gasmobiles that were
not previously as visible.  One of my favorite examples of how regeneration
works was on a recent hike I went on with my family in my wife’s Mercedes
B-Class Electric Drive.

The start of the hike is ~39 miles from my house – not bad considering our
car has a range of 87 miles, BUT the route includes 4000’ of vertical gain
heading up a curvy highway back behind Ojai, California. Both gasmobiles and
EVs expend more energy going uphill when compared to flatland – we just
haven’t paid attention to it. The switch to range-limited EVs puts our
estimated range front and center, making inefficiencies like this much more
apparent. Driving up, the elevation gain took a toll on our range as if we
had a leak in the battery. By the time we arrived, we were down to just 29
miles of projected range left, leaving me wondering just how this experiment
was going to work out, nervously offering reassurance to my wife that it
would work out.

After our hike, we returned to the car and hopped in. As the kids buckled
up, I nervously glanced at the range, hoping it had miraculously recharged
while we were out on the trail, but alas, it was not to be. We charged out
and made our way back down the mountain. In a gasmobile, I would have been
idling the whole way down hill, using friction brakes to slow down and the
gas for the occasional acceleration – essentially paying to fight gravity on
the way down the hill. In the EV however, we could immediately see the
benefits of regeneration. We were essentially just rolling down the hill,
using little to no battery power at all to propel the car. On top of that,
when I put the brakes on, our momentum is converted back to electricity and
stored.

In real life, as we coasted down the hill, our range stayed mostly static –
even gaining a mile or two every so often. The gamble paid off, and as the
miles flew by, I was confident we would make it home and in love with this
regeneration thing. In a gas car, the best we could have hoped for would be
to idle down the hill, using a fraction of the gas we had used on the way up
but still a net negative, not to mention the wear on the brakes. The end
result for us? We pulled into the driveway at home having only consuming 4
miles of our precious 29 miles of range across the 39 miles we had travelled
(25 miles of range left). It sounds extreme – and it is!

This example is definitely on the extreme end but does a great job of
illustrating how regeneration allows EVs to benefit from the energy expended
getting the car up hills or just up to speed on flat ground. Even if you
don’t live on a hill, drive up and down hills on the way to work, or even
have hills in your state (I’m looking at you Kansas), regeneration will
still help you make the most of the moving and braking energy in your EV. In
my experience, the 10–15% increase in range is a fair estimate of what folks
can expect. It’s also worth noting that you can increase or decrease this
based on aggressive or conservative driving, just as you would expect to see
in a gasmobile. This also helps EVs excel in low-speed, stop-and-go traffic,
which makes rush hour that much more bearable.

Net – regeneration is a unique advantage of EVs that I simply had not
realized would be such a significant impact that also allows users to extend
the range of their EVs with little to no effort. Chalk up another advantage
for team EV!
[© cleantechnica.com]




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