https://cleantechnica.com/2016/01/01/ev-charging-time-single-fast-charging-standard-now/
EV Charging — The Time For A Single Fast-Charging Standard Is Now!
January 1st, 2016  Kyle Field

[images  
https://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/12/shutterstock_232029649-570x570.jpg
(EV charging sign)  Image Credit: Shutterstock

https://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/12/IMG_20151120_144949-270x153.jpg
Kia Soul EV CHAdeMO Adapter (on right) | Image Credit: Kyle Field

https://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/12/sc_solo-570x376.jpg
Tesla Supercharger in Oxnard, CA | Image Credit: Kyle Field
]

The EV charging network is the gas station network for EV owners — the only
place to fill up and top off when out on the town, driving around the
fringes of an EV’s range. What’s more, charging up an EV takes longer than
fueling up an ICE vehicle, so the quantity and availability of charging
stations makes a huge impact on the functionality of EVs. To further
complicate matters, the growing fleet of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles
(PHEVs) that don’t have the same “need” to charger can frequently be found
charging at public EV charging locations, blocking out battery electric
vehicle (BEV) drivers that, as a result, might not be able to get the charge
they need to continue to their destination.

As BEVs and PHEVs increase in popularity, the current public EV charging
infrastructure will also need to be scaled up to support the fleet. The lack
of an EV fast charging standard further complicates the landscape,
fragmenting the already struggling infrastructure with several standards
competing for dominance, and manufacturers are drawing lines in the sand and
picking teams to determine which standard will reign supreme.

Where We Came From — Level 2 Charging

With the initial deployment of EVs, what we now call Level 2 chargers were
deployed far and wide to incentivize the public to purchase electric
vehicles. These chargers provide charging rates of 6.6 kilowatt-hours for
each hour of charging. In a Leaf, that equates to around 24 miles of range
per hour of charging. These chargers were a fantastic start at developing a
public charging network and gave early adopters the confidence to purchase a
$30,000 vehicle with a reduced range.

Level 2 public chargers allowed people to extend the practical range of
their EVs with just a few hours of charging required to top off their charge
before heading on to another destination. Level 2 chargers are now installed
in garages of many EV owners and the public network of chargers has only
continued to grow as EV adoption has increased.

Building a Better System — Early DC Fast Charging

To complement these chargers, Level 3 chargers — or DC fast chargers — have
started popping up. Level 3 chargers brought a significant advantage to the
table in terms of charging speed and were able to push ~19 kWhs in a
30-minute session, equating to the addition of roughly 80% of the charge or
an extra 76 miles of range. Charging rates slow as the battery nears the 90%
full range, so, your mileage may vary.

DC fast chargers have grown into the gas stations of the EV charging network
in most areas, as they allow ~80% charge in the time it takes to enjoy a cup
of coffee or grab a bite to eat.

Similar to early Level 2 chargers, Level 3 chargers are expensive, with
installations requiring significant electrical infrastructure in addition to
a hardware cost upwards of $100,000 each in the US. Due to the high capital
cost required to install Level 3 chargers, early installations have been
slower and mostly implemented by companies dedicated to charging
infrastructure like NRG EVgo and ChargePoint. These chargers started popping
up in major cities, then made their way into smaller cities across the
nation.

DC Fast Charging Today

Which brings us to today. In the southwestern United States, we have a
healthy network of Level 2 chargers supported by a sprinkling of Level 3 DC
fast chargers. On top of this mature network, EV sales have ramped up and
are weighing heavily on our primarily Level 2 charging network. Many modern
EVs are equipped with fast charging capability, with many supporting higher
speeds than the current networks even provide. As we approach the next step
change in EVs — with ranges of 200 miles requiring batteries of 60
kilowatt-hours and more — we are again approaching a point where even our
fastest chargers today will not meet the needs of the masses.

Kia Soul EV CHAdeMO Adapter (on right) | Image Credit: Kyle Field

CHAdeMO plugs are the size of a large firehose, making its charging cables
unwieldy, and it is the fast charging adapter of choice for the Kia Soul EV,
Citroen, Mitsubishi EVs, Peugots, and of course, Nissan and the established
Leaf (as an option). CHAdeMO offers charging speeds of up to 70 kW, with
real-life 30-minute charging sessions delivering just over 19 kWh of charge
or around 75 miles of extra range (on a Nissan Leaf). CHAdeMO is seeing
extremely rapid adoption in Japan, with around 5,500 stations deployed today
(crazy considering how small Japan is!). The US — specifically, California —
is ramping up deployment of CHAdeMO stations quickly as well, where over
1,300 stations have been deployed.

SAE Combined Charging Solution

Competing with CHAdeMO for the DC fast charging crown is the newer SAE
Combined Charging Solution (aka SAE Combo, or CCS), which is a standard
J1772 plug with 2 additional DC fast charging ports below it (hence the
combo moniker). This newer standard is the fast charging standard of choice
for Audi, BMW, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Porsche, and Volkswagen. Most
notably, this port can be found on the BMW i3, the Chevrolet Spark EV, and
the Volkswagen eGolf. Combo adapters are similar in size to CHAdeMO, though
due to the utilization of the existing J1772 plug, only require a single
port on the car, whereas CHAdeMO requires 2 separate on-vehicle ports.

These Combo plugs offer maximum speeds of up to 90 kW (DC Level 2) with
theoretical speeds of up to 240 kW. In real life, SAE Combo charge rates are
comparable to CHAdeMO, delivering roughly 80% of the range of ~100 mile EVS
in a 30-minute fast charging session.

Supercharged

Finally, the Tesla charging format supports all charging levels from Level 1
(normal wall outlets at 110 volts) up to the Tesla-only DC Supercharging
network which boasts the fastest broadly available charging speeds, cranking
up to 400 miles of range per hour (design rate) with a real-world miles
delivered in 30 minutes of Supercharging sitting at 170 miles. This does not
scale up linearly (170 x 2 = 340 miles of range delivered per hour), as
charging slows when the battery approaches capacity — but it’s still
extremely impressive and much faster than any other fast charging standard
with a substantial deployed footprint.

The Tesla charging standard is also much more compact than the other
standards and can be used for all charging speeds — from 110v wall charging
@ 15 amps all the way up to Supercharging.

The Road to the Future

Where to from here? Ultimately, the market will decide which manufacturer
and, thus, which standard prevails. Manufacturers are realizing the negative
sales impact the current, scattered public charging network is having and
building out branded charging networks. Much like the VHS vs Beta or the
HD-DVD vs Blu-Ray battles of the past, fragmented landscapes rarely last for
long. We will likely converge on a single standard, but the longer the
transition is drawn out, the more consumers — and EV adoption rates — will
suffer. We need a fast charging standard now to give manufacturers and
consumers confidence in EVs long into the future.

Several clear paths exist — though, with sides having already been chosen,
no option will be pain-free. An NGO or charging alliance could be formed as
a neutral self-governing body to select a dominant standard moving forward.
Though, this is challenging as these organizations cost money and offer
little financial upside for participants. Government mandates can also
create results and that feels like what may be required to unify
manufacturers as an effort to protect consumers from non-value-added
infrastructure fragmentation.

Whatever the path forward, the time for action is now. Consumers are calling
out for a single EV fast charging standard to carry us several decades into
the future…. 
[© cleantechnica.com]




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-3-L3-Charging-Standards-for-EVs-EVs-compete-w-pih-for-L2-tp4679509.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to