Canadian Researchers Create Wireless Charger For Electric Cars 179
An anonymous reader writes "University of British Columbia researchers have developed a wireless charging system for electric cars. It involves a spinning magnet beneath the parked vehicle which turns another magnet in the underside of the car. Charging takes four hours and is about 90% as efficient as plugging in. From the article: '"One of the major challenges of electric vehicles is the need to connect cords and sockets in often cramped conditions and in bad weather," says David Woodson, managing director of UBC Building Operations.
"Since we began testing the system, the feedback from drivers has been overwhelmingly positive."
Four wireless charging stations have been installed at UBC's building operations parking lot. Tests show the system is more than 90 per cent efficient compared to a cable charge. A full charge takes four hours and enables the vehicle to run throughout an eight-hour shift.'"
efficiency: 90% of cable? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:efficiency: 90% of cable? (Score:5, Informative)
Let's see if you're right. A Tesla Roadster has a 50kWh battery. Charging that in 4 hours requires 12500W of power. 10% of that is lost compared to the cable charger. That's 1.25kW of heat in addition to the heat from the inefficiencies of the rest of the charging system and the battery. That's in heater territory, but not enough to significantly heat an uninsulated garage. Problems with molten ice and snow can't be much different from parking a car with a warm engine.
Effects on the family cat? (Score:3)
It's a bigger issue than you would think, since it does put out some heat, it is extremely likely that your family cat will find a new favorite sleeping place under the car.
Granted the biggest risk might be that of a 'squashing' incident when you park or drive off without first checking for your loved one; but the effects on living tissue of spen
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Consider me re-educated.
Here's two news articles saying that the systems shut down if they detect an animal (or a fork) in the way:
http://www.techradar.com/au/news/car-tech/wireless-electric-vehicle-charging-explained-1094646
http://www.treehugger.com/cars/wireless-car-charging-action.html
So I'm not sure if they don't believe your science; or if they are just placating the ignorant masses. (Probably the latter)
Re:Effects on the family cat? (Score:4, Informative)
Different type of charging system.
The charging system in your references is working via induction - basically a transformer and the energy is transferred through an alternating magnetic field that creates a current in the coil on the car.
The system that's references here appears to use a magnet to spin a magnet on the other side that then spins a generator. I'm not sure exactly how the intensity of the magnetic field would be different because the power is still being transmitted magnetically, but it's going to be at a much lower frequency. The induction charging has a frequency of 40KHz while this would be more like 60Hz.
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OK, so it can double as a garage heater in winter. However, in the snowier parts of the country (i.e. NOT Vancouver and its suburbs), this will not be appreciated for outdoor use - lots of meltwater turning into smooth ice...
This can easily work outdoors. Both magnet sets can be encased in a non conductive cover when outdoors, so no moving parts will be exposed. I have worked with something very close to this device for charging. Wish I had thought of this first!
Er... lots are normally plowed (Score:2)
Parking lots are normally plowed to be clear of snow. If the space was not plowed than how would the car park there to charge anyway? Your post does not make a lot of sense when you think about it.
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because you can park on top of 4"-8" of snow just fine even if the lot isn't plowed.
Driving on snow... (Score:2)
Parking lots are normally plowed to be clear of snow. If the space was not plowed than how would the car park there to charge anyway?
Just go to Ontario, or Maine, or Finland, or Sweden. There's lots of snow in winter, and parking lots (although plowed quite often) are rarely free of it. Cars drive on snow and can drive on quite a depth of packed snow or a few inches of unpacked snow. In fact, driving on snow is not at all difficult, especially with proper winter tires or even just with all-season radials, and nor is parking on snow.
Your post does not make a lot of sense when you think about it.
Actually, your response indicates that you have much to learn about driving in cold climates. Perhaps yo
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Plows scrape the asphalt pretty aggressively precisely to remove layers of ice - a significant factor as to why roads in colder climates need to be repaired quite frequently.
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Snow plow blades on road lows are kept off the surface by wear blocks, so they don't dig in to the surface.
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OK, so it can double as a garage heater in winter.
I wonder if it can double as a hard disk drive eraser too ;).
Hopefully it won't accidentally spin objects and cause damage.
90% as efficent as a plug is good enough? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I think it would be more useful for public charging places. Less potential for vandalism is its embedded in the road.
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Less potential for vandalism is its embedded in the road.
LOL so you think. Give the 4chan-ers a box full of BBs or ball bearings and watch the fun begin. Depending on rotational freq etc this could be pretty exciting or dangerous.
Foreign conductive bodies are the bane of high power wireless charging. Womens fashion shoes with a conductive ring, finger rings like wedding rings, all issues with high power chargers. Even bycycle and motorcycle wheels are round enough to act as a shorted turn. Using rotating magnet power is no less of a hassle.
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Wouldn't it only be ferrous rings that are a problem? Wedding rings would presumably be things like gold or paladium instead?
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All conductive rings would have current induced in them. This will cause them to heat up _and_ generate their own magnetic field, which will cause torques but no net force.
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Open a skin trauma specialist clinic next door.
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90% may not be good enough if a plug is a convenient alternative. If you're taking an efficiency hit, might as well use it to enable something new. How about this: line up magnets under the road to charge cars as they move along. (Ideally the chargers would be powered by solar panels in the median, or in the road itself).
That would be a good idea if it weren't so obviously unworkable and wouldn't slow down every car on the road and cost a million times more than a stationary charger.
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90% may not be good enough if a plug is a convenient alternative.
You are dammed right it isn't. In fact it is totally unacceptable. Think of it as a 10% price hike (for which UK elecricity supply companies are taking huge flak right now www.theregister.co.uk/2012/10/26/edf_energy_price_rises/). I cannot imagine anyone in their right mind and able body would pay an extra 10% for a substantial chunk of fuel just to avoid putting a lead in a socket. There are many chores in my life that are a PITA, but plugging a lead into a car would come about nowhere
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I might not either, but a lot of people routinely spend twice (i.e. 100% more) than they need to on fuel, just to boost their ego or have a smoother ride or more elbow room. They buy bottled water and don't bother turning off the heat when they're not home, too.
Huh?
Re:90% as efficent as a plug is good enough? (Score:5, Interesting)
Tesla Motors is deploying solar power charging stations. When the fuel is free the 10% loss is worth it for the simplicity of having a car park where every space automatically re-charges your car, included in the cost of the ticket.
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Re:90% as efficent as a plug is good enough? (Score:4, Funny)
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And solar works remarkably well on cloudy days. the heat-based aggregators with tracking mirrors and such take a hit because they are focusing the heat of the sun, which is diffused, but PV doesn't take nearly the hit. Clouds (in general) diffuse the radiation mo
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According to this [youtube.com] test a panel that would produce 4W on a sunny day produces .75W on a cloudy day. That is only 19% of the sunny day wattage. A decrease of 80% seems like a pretty big hit to me.
Another issue is that to directly charge a 50kWh battery in 4 hours from solar panels the panels would have to produce 12.5kW. At .75A 20 V that panel, which looks to be about 2'x4' is producing 1.9W/sqft. To charge the car would require 12500/1.9= over 6500 square feet of panel. That is a lot of solar panel. Sure t
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This is why the British look so well tanned and healthy all the time.
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"And solar works remarkably well on cloudy days. the heat-based aggregators with tracking mirrors and such take a hit because they are focusing the heat of the sun, which is diffused, but PV doesn't take nearly the hit."
I don't know why people always seem so terribly surprised by this. I don't know about you, but I can still _see_ on cloudy days. Where do people think the photons are coming from?
Re:90% as efficent as a plug is good enough? (Score:4, Insightful)
J1772 standard provides for this (Score:2)
Additionally, the pilot signal is what tells the car the amount of available amperage, since that's something the car cannot sense, like voltage. I won't bother to go through all of the details of the handshake, but this piece of information is provided by the duty cycle of the 1Khz squar
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Just needs a giant plastic-coated bar magnet (Score:2, Redundant)
It involves a spinning magnet beneath the parked vehicle which turns another magnet in the underside of the car.
Oh wow, it's a jumbo Magnetic Stir Plate [wikipedia.org]! Perfect for that 1000L Erlenmeyer Flask in your garage.
F-Zero (Score:4, Insightful)
I have visions of the recharge lane.
Re:F-Zero (Score:4, Interesting)
Joking aside, that's not a half-bad idea. Even if we're talking about the non-magnetic forms of wireless power transmission, it could be possible in the distant future to embed the technology in our highways and have it powered by roadside solar panels, etc.
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But you wouldn't drive in the lane to get a full power-up; you'd only need enough to maintain cruising speed, which is a lot less power. Or even less than that, if you're just looking for any sort of external boost to make up for the inherent issues with trying to store power onboard.
As for slowing the car down, that may be the case with a magnetic charger, but I'm not sure about inductive coupling--I'll defer to the EEs to make a ruling on that one.
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Lots of Canadian stories this weekend (Score:4, Insightful)
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sounds hurltastic (Score:2)
OK now go get a snow saucer and tape a few strong magnets on some inside edges. go out to the parking lot. Put a quarter into the meter, sit, and spiiiiiin !
Existing tech (Score:5, Informative)
This is used all of the time in pumps where you don't want a dynamic seal. You have permanent magnets spun by a motor and inside a sealed case the pump is coupled by a magnetic field.
http://www.proconpumps.com/brands/Magnetically-Coupled-Pump-(Sealless).html [proconpumps.com]
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What, a spinning magnet? (Score:4, Interesting)
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In what world is it a good idea to encourage idiots?
We need to be publicly humiliating these people (public double blind testing) not wasting time and money building nonsensical things to not actually work around the non-issues they have their panties in a bunch over.
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p.s. We also REALLY understand the metric system up here.
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1. I am personally not qualified to judge the impact of EMF upon living organisms. In order to do this I would need a university education, and would then have to spend a considerable amount of time in study.
2. But there are people who are qualified. Experts. I can tell who these people are because they are educated in respected academic institutions, hold qualifications in the appropriate field and are published
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> why can't they just get out the car and plug it in instead? Why do we waste time on these people?
You've never forgotten to plug your phone in to charge it?
Yes, but that was my problem and this is their problem. Why should I waste time (and public funding) on their problem?
They say the best way to remember your wife's birthday is to forget it once.
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They say the best way to remember your wife's birthday is to forget it once.
Yes, then it'll appear on your divorce papers.
back to the future (Score:3)
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Not my first thought, Nikola Tesla did come up with it, yet the article makes no such claim:
FTA:
"Wireless charging has been a much sought-after technical solution for everything from cell phones to electric cars,"
Yet you don't need to charge the damn things just have a transmitter to power them; and
what blocked Nikola Tesla from successfully showing it was possible.
Money never interested Tesla, only cared for what it took to build his "stuff". Tesla's
plan was free power for everybody at any place in the wor
Wind up cars return! (Score:4, Funny)
Brilliant Idea, but One Suggestion (Score:5, Funny)
Brilliant. I'd make a teensy change. Replace the spinning magnet outside the car with a cable, and replace the spinning magnet and generator in the car's underbody with a plug. Run power through the cable to the plug, but only after there's been a handshake between the cable and the plug. Use the equipment that would spin the magnets to establish a physical connection between the cable and the plug.
I think the efficiency of this, compared to old techniques, will be closer to 100% of existing efficiency than to 90%.
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Dude! I think you're on to something but let's take it a step further. We don't really want electricity in the car. We want the car to go places. So take the spinning motion, and stretch it out along a cable. Then, have the car grab the cable. Then you've got the motion transferred directly to the car via cable, without any electricity involved. There's just a cable and a car. We could call it a "cable-car". I bet it would really safe [go.com] since there's no electro-magnetic waves at all anywhere. Just m
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Eddy currents (Score:2)
I foresee losses due to eddy currents induced in the chassis of many cars. Because metal (usually steel) is the predominant chassis material currently and in the foreseeable future.
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10% to plug in a cable (Score:2)
I think I would go with the cable myself, you would also save a few thousand on car and wireless transmitter as well I imagine.
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I knew I could scroll and find this. This is a crappy, stupid idea. What we need is not inductive charging while sitting still, but inductive charging while almost sitting still... during the commute. In places where cars regularly go slowly there should be inductive charging systems, and some sort of micropayment system should permit rolling charging. That's where inductive charging actually becomes useful. While you're sitting still, there's no reason not to plug in a cable, and inductive charging systems
Parking (Score:2)
So does this mean that you would need to do a 100% perfect parking job to get the 90%, and if you were off by a few inches it would go way down, be off by a half a foot and it would not work at all?
It seems to me that parking the car perfectly would be significantly more work than just getting it within reach of a cable.
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That's why it only works in Canada. Have you seen how the average American parks??
This has been done before (Score:2)
A more complicated solution involving inductive nearfield power was developed by GE for electric cars around 5 years ago, and they've demonstrated a near finished commercial product, asserted it was safe that would even work underwater, and wouldn't short.
Yes, there was a slashdot article, no I can't find it. They tried selling it to san franciso, but they opted out, as the unknown effects of high power RF.
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Could be very dangerous for people with pacemakers (Score:2)
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It doesn't but I can see how it would be easier to be efficient while doing so - you start trying to inductively couple things and you end up with magnetic field lines and EM flying all over the place. Not that it can't be done, but it's not trivial.
Whereas a pair of magnets under mutual attraction are basically locked together, and so all you're really dealing with is the mechanical efficiencies, and the second magnet can be the permanent stator of your generator.
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Straw man. It's no harder to close the magnetic circuit of an inductive charging system (electromagnets) than it is a pair of permanent magnets like this, if you know what you're doing. The only difference is this system will produce a much lower frequency electromagnetic oscillation--in fact, it would be easier for the inductive system, since higher frequencies require smaller and less sophisticated materials to contain. What is the radiative effect when the two spinning magnets are not centered perfectly
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The magnetic fields are magically contained under the car? For that matter the moving magnetic fields won't overload every wire in the car?
If I was in BC I would drop a few pachinca balls into the bushes next to the prototypes. I'd love to see the experimenters shit themselves.
Re:Spinning magnet in the car? (Score:4, Informative)
It's called a "magnetic circuit" [wikipedia.org] (scroll down halfway for an actual diagram). They are used all the time in high-efficiency motors and solenoids. By putting the right type of iron in the right shape around a coil or a permanent magnet, the iron provides a "path of least resistance" for the magnetic field lines and the field that escapes from the iron is small or miniscule.
If you have ever taken apart a mechanical hard drive, you will have found the very strong neodymium magnets used in the head travel motor are attached to a piece of metal--probably an alloy called "mu metal" or similar--and the observable effect is that you can only magnetically stick things to the magnet side, not the mu-metal side. That is because of where the magnetic field lines go: instead of going out one side of the magnet, around in the air, and back in the other side, they go out into the air on ones side and then directly into the mu metal, then through the mu metal and into the magnet. This not only shields the magnetic data on the hard drive platters from the motor magnets, but also greatly increases the efficiency of the motor.
I assume they will do the same thing with this car. There will be a pretty significant "air gap" in the magnetic circuit, which increases leakage, but it is easy to provide iron on the top side of the in-car magnet so that all the field lines are directed downward and away from the interior of the car.
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How many pounds of pig iron did you just add to the weight of the car? It will still leak, alignment will be imperfect etc.
It's a dumb idea.
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Fortunately charging a car wouldn't need a 100kW microwave. Both because you don't need 100kW (unless you are in a hurry of charging your car, but then, I'm not sure the battery would take that anyway), and because you'd not use microwaves to do it (after all, you don't have to remote-charge your car; instead you'd put it directly onto the charger).
Re:Why the second magnet? (Score:4, Interesting)
Nevermind...finally read the article thoroughly. They're just placating the idiots who think that other types of wireless power transmission is black magic or something, as if quickly rotating magnetic fields (not to mention large magnetic discs) is any safer than electrical fields alone. Apparently these people have never heard of electromagnetism and aren't aware that the two are intrinsically linked.
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Nope, us Canadians have nothing better to do on a Saturday other than post articles to Slashdot. Y'know, we have bitter cold and snowy winters, eh?
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other benefits of computer driven cars - make money while at work by being a taxi
You are going to love it when it is returned to you at going-home time, and you find the floor swimming in some drunk's vomit, shit and condoms, discarded take-aways on the vandalised seats, and the navigator ripped out. Taxis get enough crap even with a driver present to moderate things.
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Yes, it will require at least a week long course to learn how to put a plug in a socket - perhaps two weeks to be on the safe side.
Yes, it must take at least 15 minutes to do that (who said anything about "employees" anyway?)
Yes, that is going to need a degree in rocket science. (who said anything about "parking attendants" anyway?)
??????? The time to pluck up the courage to get out the car if it is raining? They will need to bite that bullet whether they have to plug a charger or not
a whole parking garage of wirelessly charging electric vehicles that _isn't_ a glowing electromagetic dome of inteference should be exciting.
I
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You mean like what they use for MRIs?
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20060902235859AAjZ7gx [yahoo.com]
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Street. Shark.