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Electric Vehicle
Charging
As the number of electric vehicles (EVs)
on the roads increases, charging them
all becomes a challenge. There are
many ways to charge an EV (AC or DC,
fast or slow etc), and some charging
stations can only charge certain
vehicles. This article describes the
various charging systems, connectors
and varying charge rates, from a few
kW up to 1MW!
By Dr David Maddison
hile there are obviously other difW
ferences, the main practical difference between EVs and ICE vehicles
is the method of recharging or refuelling. An EV can be charged at home, at
work or via a dedicated charging station at a shopping centre, parking lot
or other location. In contrast, an ICE
or hybrid vehicle is refuelled at a service station or from a fuel can.
The amount of time these procedures take can vary wildly. An EV
can take hours (sometimes more than
a day) for a full recharge, although a
‘top up’ at a fast charger can be much
quicker, perhaps under half an hour.
In contrast, refuelling an ICE vehicle
usually takes a couple of minutes.
The time to recharge, along with the
distance between charging stations,
can cause “range anxiety” for EV drivers. Still, petrol and diesel vehicles
are not immune from that, especially
when away from urban centres in a
country as large as Australia!
In places such as the USA, Europe
and Japan, there is a sufficiently high
population density that charging stations are relatively closely spaced, but
that is not always the case in Australia.
Also, long road trips of up to 1000km
or more are rare in places like Europe
and Japan.
This article covers the practical and
technical aspects of charging EVs, such
as connector standards, power supply
16
Silicon Chip
issues, charging times, the extent of
recharging networks, limitations of
charging at home and other relevant
matters.
Charging stations
One of the most important aspects
of EV ownership is locating charging
stations, especially when planning a
long trip. Many EV owners also install
a home charger, although most can be
charged from a regular power point
(but that can be slow).
The main components of an EV
charging station are:
• The power source (usually derived
from the mains, but possibly solar panels, other batteries or a generator).
• The charging cable.
• The connector that plugs into the
vehicle.
As part of all this, there are various
charging standards, data protocols and
charging protocols, charger power ratings, voltages and currents.
Some charging stations have their
own cable and connector; others
require you to provide a cable with a
suitable connector, typically kept in
the vehicle. There are also adaptors
to convert from one type of connector to another.
It would be grand if any EV could
rock up to any charging station, plug
in and get a charge, but unfortunately, there are too many competing
Australia's electronics magazine
standards for that always to happen.
Now is as good a time as any to bring
up that old chestnut from Andrew S.
Tanenbaum: “The nice thing about
standards is that you have so many to
choose from”!
EV charging stations in
Australia and NZ
There is now a reasonable network
of EV charging stations in the more
populated areas of Australia and NZ,
documented at www.plugshare.com
Fig.1: an EV charging station in
Adelaide. Source: www.wikiwand.
com/en/Plug-in_electric_vehicles_in_
Australia (CC BY-SA 2.0).
siliconchip.com.au
However, for longer-distance trips,
it is still necessary to ensure you have
the range to get between charging stations on your proposed route, allowing for any side trips.
Also, during peak periods such
as school holidays, there can be 90
minutes of delays at some charging
locations; for example, see this
reporter’s video on what happened
in Australia last holiday period at:
https://twitter.com/PhilWilliamsABC/
status/1607951693039423490
Some remote charging stations run
on diesel fuel or biodiesel (see Fig.2).
An experimental 50kW charger was
coupled with a diesel/biodiesel-
powered generator by inventor Jon
Edwards, who called it a “ChargePod”.
It produces 3.392kWh/litre of diesel.
Some trips in the Australian Outback are unsuitable for electric vehicles with present range limitations
(such as the nearly 1900km Canning
Stock route – https://w.wiki/6RUS).
Battery configurations and
charging
Virtually every EV on the market
today uses lithium-ion batteries (with
lithium polymer or LiPo being one
variant). They typically have large
numbers of cells joined in mechanically and electrically complex ways
with embedded cooling systems
(between cells in the case of Tesla and
some other models), along with sensors, fuses etc.
We covered lithium-ion battery
technology in detail in the August
2017 issue (siliconchip.au/Article/
10763).
To give an idea of the complexity,
the Tesla Model Y has 4400 of 2170
size cells, meaning they are 21mm
in diameter and 70mm long. There
are 17,600 welded connections, four
per cell.
Tesla is starting to use 4680 cells in
Texas-made models, which are 46mm
in diameter and 80mm long. Those
battery packs only need 830 cells and
1660 welded connections, giving a significant cost saving.
The Tesla Model S battery pack
(Fig.3) has 6912 18650-size cells
arranged as 16 modules, each in the
6S72P configuration (72 paralleled
strings of six series cells) and with
individual cell voltages from 3.10V
at 0% capacity to 4.15V at 100%
capacity.
Even though an EV may contain
siliconchip.com.au
What if your battery runs flat?
Check your options with your EV supplier or roadside assistance organisation;
for example, in NSW and the ACT, the NRMA offers roadside assistance vans
to charge flat EVs.
Two NRMA vans have been equipped with 4.8kWh lithium-ion battery packs
that provide 1km of charge every two minutes (see siliconchip.au/link/abkc).
Enough energy is provided to get to the nearest charging station; a ten-minute
charge will get you about 5km.
A company called RE:START (https://restartev.com/) has investment from
the RACV (the Victorian motoring organisation)
and produces a fast charging unit which they say
will provide 50km of range in 15mins – see Fig.a.
Another European solution is a trailer-mounted
generator such as the EP Tender (https://
eptender.com/en/product/) shown in Fig.b. You
can rent this trailer for longer trips to charge
your battery as necessary, even while driving.
The same company is developing a batteryFig.a: a roadside
only trailer.
assistance fastcharging unit produced
Some people have also carried generators in
by RE:START. Source:
their EVs, but you need a large and powerful one
https://restartev.com/
to charge at a reasonable rate.
A YouTuber permanently installed a generator
in his Tesla as an experiment, thus turning it into a hybrid – see Fig.c. The
video is titled “Cordless Tesla (I Drive 1800 miles without charging)” and is at
https://youtu.be/hHhf223jGIE
If all else fails, you would have to either call a tow truck or a nearby friend
with a portable generator.
Fig.b: a solution to EV range anxiety.
Source: https://eptender.com/en/
product/
Fig.c: a rear view of the ‘hybrid Tesla’
with a 10kW generator. Source: youtu.
be/hHhf223jGIE
Fig.2: a diesel/biodieselpowered EV charger in the
Outback. Source: https://
thedriven.io/2018/12/14/
diesel-charge-evs-remotelocations-greener-thanyou-think/
Fig.3: a partially
disassembled Tesla Model
S battery pack with 6912
18650-size cells in 16
modules. It has a rated
capacity of 85kWh at
400V DC. Source: https://
hackaday.com/2014/09/13/
tesla-model-s-batteryteardown/
Australia's electronics magazine
July 2023 17
standards from Table 1 and adding
those shown in Table 2.
Fig.4: the
charging
scheme for
a typical
lithium-ion
battery, like
those used in
most EVs.
Charging Connector Types
EV Charging connectors and protocols can be divided into AC charging
(single-phase or three-phase) and DC
charging, with preferences for different connector types by region shown
in Fig.5. While we’re showing regional
preferences, different connector types
can still be found within the same
region. The following types of connectors are in use or planned:
AC
● Type 1 (Yazaki, SAE J1772, single-
phase)
● Type 2 (Mennekes, SAE J3068,
three-phase)
● Type 2 (GB/T, type 2 physical
connector with different pinouts)
● Type 3 (Scame, uncommon)
thousands of cells, each cell still has to
be charged using the basic lithium-ion
charging scheme shown in Fig.4. The
primary charging scheme involves
charging at a constant current until
the maximum voltage is reached, then
holding them at that voltage until the
current drops below a certain level.
If the initial state of charge is low,
this scheme might also be preceded
by a ‘conditioning charge’ at a much
lower current, to allow the cell chemistry to stabilise before rapid charging
begins.
Regardless, the variation in charge
voltage and current will be managed by
the battery management system (BMS).
Individual lithium cells might range
in voltage from 3.10V to 4.15V in the
case of the Model S, but due to the 6S
configuration, each module charges to
24.9V. The modules are also arranged
in series sets of 16, giving 398.4V
(24.9V × 16), so the vehicle requires a
400V charger.
There is no chance of connector
incompatibility due to different connector standards if the EV owner uses
their own cable, as long as the remote
end is compatible with the charging
station connector.
However, at high-power DC charging
stations, the cable is permanently
attached to the charger because it is
thick, heavy and often has coolant
running through it.
In Australia, the Type 2 connector
(also used throughout Europe) is the
most common to find. This can be used
for AC or DC charging. We will come
back to that a bit later.
Charging stations and cables
Table 1 – SAE J1772 voltage & power standards (limits) for North America
Charging stations are either AC or
DC. If the charging station supplies
DC, it is applied directly to the battery pack, and the charge rate is limited only by what the pack can handle.
However, if the station supplies AC,
the vehicle uses an onboard AC-to-DC
converter, which will typically be the
limitation on the rate of charge. For
example, many plug-in hybrids have
an onboard converter that’s limited to
7.2kW (32A <at> 225V AC single-phase),
while some EVs are limited to 11kW
(16A <at> 432V AC three-phase); others
can handle 22kW (32A three-phase).
At lower-power AC charging stations, the EV owner can use their own
cable, which is kept with the vehicle
and plugged into the charging station
outlet (or a cable might be provided).
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Silicon Chip
Voltage and power standards
Various EV charger power and voltage ratings have been defined. Table 1
summarises those for North America.
The IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) has produced standards for international implementation by adopting most of the SAE
Method Current
DC
● CHAdeMO (AA⋆)
● GB/T (BB⋆)
● ChaoJi (planned)
● CCS “Combo” Type 1 (EE⋆)
● CCS “Combo” Type 2 (FF⋆)
● Megawatt Charging System
⋆ AA, BB, EE & FF are designations
under the IEC 62196 standard.
AC & DC
● NACS (Tesla)
Combined Charging System
Combined Charging System (CCS)
connectors are based on extensions
to the Type 1 (North America & Japan)
and Type 2 (Europe & Australia)
Voltage
Power
Notes
AC Level 1 16A
120V
1.92kW
Standard domestic outlet
AC Level 2 80A
208-240V
19.2kW
240V single-phase or
208V three-phase
DC Level 1 80A
50-1000V
80kW
DC Level 2 400A
50-1000V
400kW
Table 2 – IEC additional charging standards (limits)
Mode Type
Current
Voltage
Power
250V
4kW
16A
480V
11kW
2 single-phase 32A
250V
7.4kW
32A
480V
22kW
3 single-phase 63A
250V
14.5kW
63A
480V
43.5kW
200A
400V
80kW
1 single-phase 16A
three-phase
three-phase
three-phase
4 DC
Australia's electronics magazine
The three-phase power
ratings are about
50% higher than the
product of the voltage
and current, since the
current rating is per
conductor and there are
three conductors rather
than two for singlephase.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.5 (left): some common EV charge connector types. Not
shown are Type 3, ChaoJi or Tesla. For more details, visit
https://w.wiki/6RUd
Fig.6 (below): the Type 1 connector pinout. L1 is AC Line
1, N is Neutral for Level 1 charging or AC Line 2 for level
2 charging, PE is protective earth, PP is the ‘plug present’
signal and CP is ‘control pilot’ for various control signals.
Source: https://w.wiki/6RHE (CC BY-SA 4.0).
L1
N
PP
CP
PE
Fig.7 (right): a
Type 1 connector.
Source: https://w.
wiki/6RHF
connectors. The extensions consist
of two additional DC connector pins
to allow high-power DC charging. In
such a configuration, the AC pins of the
original part of the Type 1 and Type 2
connectors are no longer used.
The extended connector is called
CCS Type 1 (CCS1), Type 2 (CCS2),
Combo 1 or Combo 2. Power can be
delivered at up to 350kW and 200920V. We will illustrate these connectors later.
Type 1 and Combo 1
The Type 1 connector is also known
as the SAE J1772, J plug or Yazaki (see
Figs.6 & 7). It is also covered by the
international standard IEC 62196 as
the Type 1. It is common in Japan &
North America, and is used in Australia on cars such as the Holden Volt, Nissan Leaf, Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV,
BMW i3, BMW i8 and Porsche Taycan.
The Combo 1 connector for highpower DC charging is a Type 1 with
two DC charging pins added (see
Fig.8); the AC pins are not used.
Type 2 and Combo 2
Type 3
Also known as Mennekes or IEC
62196-2, Type 2 is a mandated standard in Europe and commonly used
in Australia, mainly by Teslas and
some European models. These are
installed at Tesla charging stations,
although only Teslas can connect at
such stations.
For AC charging, vehicles with this
connector typically charge at 7.2kW
for 230V/32A single-phase AC or
22kW for 400V three-phase AC.
Two more DC charging pins are
added for high-power DC charging,
forming the Combo 2 or CCS2
F
CP
N
DC+
Fig.8: a Combo 1 plug for high-power
DC charging. Source: https://w.
wiki/6RHG (CC BY-SA 4.0).
siliconchip.com.au
The Type 3 or Scame connector was
used in France and Italy but has now
been superseded by the European standard connector, Type 2.
GB/T
The Chinese GB/T 20234.2-2015
connector uses the same physical connector as Type 2 (AC) but with gender
differences for the plugs and a different signalling protocol.
GB/T (DC)
The GB/T DC charging connector
is mainly used in China (see Fig.11)
M
PP
PE
L3
connector (Figs.9 & 10), which can
transfer power at 350kW. The AC pins
are eliminated or not used. Where this
connector is used in the USA, it is covered by the SAE J3068 standard.
PP
L1
L2
DC-
L1
CP
PE
L2
DC-
N
L3
DC+
Figs.9 & 10: a Combo 2 connector (the leftmost cable in Fig.10); yellow AC pins
are unused. Without the bottom two pins, it would be a Type 2 (the rightmost
cable in Fig.10). F is the charging station outlet, while M is the car inlet. PP
is the ‘proximity pilot’ signal, CP is the ‘control pilot’ signal, PE protective
earth, N neutral and L1-L3 are the three phases. DC+ and DC- are only used
for Combo 2 charging. Source: https://w.wiki/6RHJ & https://w.wiki/6RHK (CC
BY-SA 4.0).
Australia's electronics magazine
July 2023 19
S+
CC2
S-
CC1
DC+
A+
DCPE
A-
Fig.11: the GB/T DC connector.
S+ & S- are CAN bus, CC1 & CC2
the charging confirmation signals,
A+ & A- are auxiliary power, PE
is protective earth and DC+ & DCcarry up to 1kV at 250A. Source:
https://w.wiki/6RHM
FG
SS1
N/C
DCP
DC+
DCPP
C-H
C-L
SS2
Fig.12: the CHAdeMO connector
pinout. FG is ground, N/C is not
connected, DCP charging enable,
SS1 & SS2 are the charging
start and stop signals, PP is the
charge interlock to disable the
drivetrain during charging, while
C-L & C-H are CAN bus signals
to communicate with the vehicle.
Source: https://w.wiki/6RHL
and is also designated as the BB configuration under IEC 61851-23, IEC
61851-24 and Chinese standard GB/T
20234.3. A power delivery of up to
250kW is possible, and CAN bus signalling is used.
CHAdeMO
CHAdeMO is a Japanese standard
(see Figs.12 & 13). The name comes
from “Charge de Move” (a French
phrase), which its developers interpret as “charge for moving”.
However, it originally comes as
a pun on the phrase “o cha demo
ikaga desuka” (おちゃでもいかがです
か), which means “how about a cup
of tea?”, referring to the time taken to
charge a vehicle!
CHAdeMO is popular in Japan but
less widely used in the USA or Europe.
The second generation CHAdeMO
standard is capable of 400kW <at>
1kV/400A DC.
In Australia, the CHAdeMO connector is used by the Nissan Leaf; as
more EVs are bought to Australia, it
might become more widely adopted.
Tritium-brand charging stations support this connector.
The connector supports bidirectional operation, such as using the EV
as a power source (more on that later).
A third generation, called ChaoJi,
that can deliver 900kW is being co-
developed with China; see https://w.
wiki/6RHf
ChaoJi
Not to be confused with the Tesla
Megacharger, the MCS (Fig.14) is a
high-power charging connector under
development for large EVs (eg, trucks,
ferries and aircraft). It has a power rating of 3.75MW or 3000A at 1.25kV DC.
20
Silicon Chip
Charging-related standards such as
connectors, protocols and ‘vehicle
to grid’ (V2G, described below) are
covered by specifications in the
following documents:
● China: GB/T 20234
● International: IEC 61851, IEC
62196, IEC 63110 & ISO 15118
(V2G)
● North America: SAE J1772,
SAE J3068, SAE J3105 (heavy
vehicles) & SAE J3271 (megawatt
charging)
Some charging methods and
protocols are proprietary and not
covered by the above standards.
fast DC chargers that form the Tesla
Supercharger network and facilitate
long-distance trips, usually at 120kW
or 250kW. There are also lower-power
Tesla ‘destination chargers’ at places
like hotels and shopping centres, typically delivering 22kW.
Tesla NACS
Tesla has developed its own charging
standard called the North American
Charging Standard. It was initially proprietary, but Tesla has now published
it for all to use, and Aptera Motors has
adopted it.
The connector is smaller than a
J1172/CCS connector but uses the
same pins. It has the same communications protocol as CCS, ISO 15118
and DIN 70121. In Australia, Tesla uses
the Type 2 connector. A Tesla Model 3
has additional pins for higher power
charging, with a CCS Type 2 connector, but it can also use a Type 2 connector only.
ChaoJi, also known as CHAdeMO
3.0, is a proposed standard for an EV
car connector developed between
Japan and China for charging at powers up to 900kW DC with a maximum
voltage of 1.5kV and a maximum current of 600A.
It is designed to be backward- Adaptors
compatible using an adaptor for
Various adaptors (see Fig.15) are
CHAdeMO and GB/T DC charging. A available to convert one charging conmegawatt charging connector called nector to another type, but data signals
“Ultra-ChaoJi” is also under devel- must also be compatible.
opment.
Megawatt Charging System (MCS)
Fig.13: a CHAdeMO plug. Source:
https://w.wiki/6RHQ
Charger & connector standards
Tesla Supercharger
Tesla Superchargers are high-power
Australia's electronics magazine
Charging levels
Depending on the available power,
there are different charging levels (not
to be confused with connector type),
as shown in Tables 1 and 2. The following names are commonly used in
Australia.
These charging level names do not
conform with the IEC international
recommended levels (which they call
Modes), outlined in Table 2.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.14: a prototype Megawatt
Charging System connector v3.2.
There are two DC pins, four data
communications pins (white) and a
protective earth pin (PE). Source:
https://w.wiki/6RHN (CC BY-SA 4.0).
Fig.15: a Type 1 to Type 2 adaptor
sold by EVSE. Source: https://evse.
com.au/product/type-1-to-type-2-evadapter-cable-32a-2
Level 1 uses a standard domestic
single-phase 230V AC ‘GPO’ outlet.
This is the most basic level of charging.
The charging power is 2.3kW in Australia and NZ. At this rate, it takes one
day plus eight and a half hours to fully
charge a Tesla Model 3 from flat, with
14km of range added per hour.
Single-phase 15A 3.45kW outlets
can also be installed in premises in
Australia & New Zealand, increasing
that rate to 20km/hour and reducing
the total charging time for that vehicle
to around 22 hours.
You will often see slightly higher
powers quoted because the supply
voltage is usually higher than the nominal voltage of 230V AC; those higher
power ratings are generally based on
an average of 240V. A proprietary
single-
phase Tesla charging station
will deliver 7.2kW, adding 42km per
hour of charging and fully charging
the Model 3 in 10.5 hours.
Level 2 charging is from a threephase (~400V) 16A outlet. Such outlets
are not typical in homes in Australia
or New Zealand but can be installed
easily. The power delivery is 11kW,
taking 5.5-7.5 hours to fully charge
a Tesla Model 3 at a rate of 65km of
range added per hour.
Note that 400V 32A outlets are also
possible and provide 22kW, doubling
that charging rate and halving the total
charging time.
There is some argument over the
exact definition of “Level 3”, but this
refers to high-power DC charging,
which is unlikely to be affordable and
not always possible in domestic installations. The typical power delivery
is 120kW, and it takes about half an
hour to charge a Tesla Model 3 from
flat to 80%. But note that repeated
fast charging can prematurely age the
battery.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.16(a): An overall view of one of
the chargers. There is a place to tap a
payment card above the car symbol.
Local council charging station
I had a close look at my local council charging station, which is typical of
what might be found around Australia
– see Fig.16. Each side of the station
has a Type 2 outlet (socket) into which
you plug in your cable.
The Tesla prime-mover
Megacharger
Terminology varies from country to
country, but the ten-wheel unit that
pulls an eight-plus-wheel trailer is
called a prime-mover in Australia and
New Zealand, or a tractor unit, among
other names, in North America. Tesla
Fig.16(b): Another charger with its own
cables (Type 2 plug & socket); they can
be unplugged from the charger socket
to plug in your own. In the corner is a
close-up of the Type 2 plug.
The cost to charge an EV
It depends on how much you pay for electricity and how efficient your charger
is, but at around 30-40¢/kWh in Australia, assuming 10% losses, charging a
typical 60kWh EV battery will cost around $20-26. Public fast chargers have
a higher cost per kW (60¢/kWh for some 350kW chargers), so a full charge
might cost up to $40.
The ‘fuel economy’ of EVs is generally measured in kWh/100km. Some
people overseas use “MPGe” or miles per gallon (equivalent). However, equating
electricity to a volume of liquid fuel containing a similar amount of energy is
flawed logic.
At around 17kWh/100km (a figure measured in real-world testing), that $2040 charge will take you around 350km. By comparison, $20-40 will buy you
11-22 litres of petrol which, for a hybrid Camry, equates to a range of about
250-500km. The average fuel consumption of a purely petrol-powered vehicle
was 10.8L/100km from the ABS 2020 figures.
When charging an EV, you are not paying the 46¢ plus GST per litre “excise”
applied to petrol and diesel. However, in Victoria, EVs are taxed at 2.6¢/km
and hybrids at 2.1¢/km.
The excise money is meant to pay for road building and maintenance,
although it is actually a general revenue-raising tax.
Australia's electronics magazine
July 2023 21
is developing a prime-mover called
the Tesla Semi (see Fig.17), not to be
confused with the Tesla Cybertruck, a
much smaller utility vehicle.
The vehicle is said to have a
900kWh, 1000V battery, a range of
997km with no load, and a range of
480km or 800km with an unspecified
load, depending on the model. It is to
be charged with a 1MW DC charger
called the Megacharger.
This charger will also be used for the
Cybertruck, which employs a 1000V
battery system rather than the 400V
system used in Tesla cars.
Some industry experts are sceptical
about the capabilities of the Tesla Semi
and its cost-effectiveness. Ultimately,
that will be decided by the marketplace. The Semi started deliveries in
the USA in December 2022.
A car charging cable such as the V3
would not be suitable for charging the
Tesla Semi because it would take too
long with battery capacities in the
hundreds of kWh. Therefore, Tesla
developed a V4 charging cable that
can deliver 1MW.
Like the V3 cable, it has active cooling, but instead of 12 power wires, it
has two. Each wire is immersed in its
own coolant return tube, with coolant
supplied by two tubes along the body
of the cable – see Fig.18.
According to Tesla, a current density
of 35A/mm2 can be achieved. Adding the coolant lines to prevent overheating means less copper is needed
for a given current, saving expensive
copper and reducing the weight of
the cable.
By comparison, the Tesla V3 supercharging cable (also shown in Fig.18)
has a power conductor current density of about 14A/mm2, allowing up
to 250kW to flow. The Tesla V2 cable
Can the electrical grid handle mass EV charging?
There are already problems in the upmarket suburb of Brighton in Melbourne,
where EV-owning residents wanted to set up a charging schedule. See the
articles at siliconchip.au/link/abjp (Herald Sun) and siliconchip.au/link/abjq
(radio 2GB).
We don’t know what future electricity policy will dictate. Still, in Australia,
there is the big question of whether enough reliable, low-cost power will be
available to charge all the anticipated EVs. Consider that total generation has
been stagnant for the last few years.
Secondly, what will happen if everyone goes home from work, plugs in the EV
and draws an extra 2.3kW to 22kW (Level 1 and Level 2 charging) per vehicle
per household, all at the same time?
Our back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that the total generation
would likely have to at least double to provide enough power to charge all those
vehicles, assuming the demand is evenly spread out. That’s based on electric
passenger vehicles only; we haven’t considered delivery trucks, semi-trailers
or other commercial vehicles, including those used in mining.
The grid will also need significant investment to carry twice as much power,
with many transformers needing to be upgraded, along with transmission lines.
That makes local generation and storage, such as with PV solar panels and
stationary batteries, seem attractive. Unfortunately, there are problems with
that too.
Each home would need a very large solar system to gather enough energy
to charge an EV (depending on how much driving was being done). As it’s
unlikely that the charging time would coincide with power availability, large
batteries would be needed to store the energy when it is available, then charge
the vehicle when it’s plugged in.
is uncooled and has a current density
of up to 4A/mm2.
Electrical power losses in conductors scale with the square of the current, so losses can be reduced by reducing the current and increasing the voltage. To achieve four times the power
rating of the V3 cable, the charging
voltage has also been increased from
400V for the Tesla Models 3, Y, S and
X to 1000V for the Cybertruck and
the Semi.
Increasing the voltage results in new
problems, such as the requirement for
more insulation and additional design
elements to prevent electrical breakdown and arcing.
The above is about the cable only;
no details have yet been released on
the type of connector used with the
1MW charging system.
Wireless car charging
The SAE J2954 standard relates to
wireless charging or “wireless power
transfer (WPT)” for EVs – see Fig.19.
Power deliveries of 3.7kW, 7.7kW or
11kW are allowed for. There is also a
provision for 500kW transfer for large
vehicles under J2954/2.
The principle of wireless charging is
similar to inductive charging but uses
‘resonant inductive coupling’. Currently, the Genesis GV60 (a Hyundai
1 MW + DC CHARGING
IMMERSION COOLING TECHNOLOGY
CHARGING AMPACITY
40
HIGH VOLTAGE
CONDUCTORS
2
AMPS / MM
35
V3 CHARGING
CABLE
30
25
COOLANT TUBES
20
15
HV CONDUCTORS
IMMERSED IN
COOLANT RETURN
TUBES
10
5
V2
Fig.17: a Tesla Semi EV. Source: Tesla.
22
Silicon Chip
V3
V4
V4 CHARGING
CABLE
COOLANT TUBES
Fig.18: a comparison of the Tesla V2, V3 and V4 charging cables with crosssections showing the power conductor parts of the V3 & V4 cables. Source:
Tesla, screen grab from https://youtu.be/LtOqU2o81iI?t=1600
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
luxury brand) is the only EV with
wireless charging, and this option is
only available in South Korea at the
moment.
For more details, see the video titled
“How to make EVs - From EV Batteries to Wireless Charging Technology
| Genesis GV60” at https://youtu.be/
npUNCgT68bE
The Open Charge Alliance
The Open Charge Alliance (OCA;
www.openchargealliance.org) is an
international consortium to promote
the use of open standards via the adoption of the Open Charge Point Protocol
(OCPP) and the Open Smart Charging
Protocol (OSCP). These standards are
for ‘cloud-based’ charger system (network) management.
The OCA standards are for communications between the charge point or
charge point network and the ‘back
office’ and do not involve physical
connector or charging protocol standards for an EV. The EV owner does
not interact directly or knowingly with
OCPP and OSCP, although they might
operate ‘behind the scenes’.
OSCP 2.0 (Fig.20) is for charging site
owners and electricity utilities. It communicates predictions of locally available electrical production and generation capacity, fits production and generation resources to grid capacity and
facilitates communication between
the providers. In other words, it helps
ensure that sufficient electricity will
be available for the vehicles that need
charging.
OCPP 2.0.1 (Fig.21) is relevant to
charging points, providing a consistent experience even when charging at
locations owned and operated by different parties. It supports SOAP and
JSON data formats, smart charging,
load balancing, charging profiles,
tracks the time spent charging and the
current status while providing device
management, transaction handling
and security.
Fig.19: a wireless charger for an EV, which can surprisingly deliver multiple
kilowatts. Usually, a low barrier is placed so that the vehicle naturally comes to
a stop over the charger. Source: https://w.wiki/6RHP (CC BY-SA 3.0).
Fig.20: the Open Smart Charging Protocol (OSCP) communicates a 24-hour
forecast of the available electricity (blue). Based on this, service providers
generate charging profiles (red) for EVs to make the best use of the grid capacity.
Source: www.openchargealliance.org/protocols/oscp-10/
Vehicle to Grid (V2G)
Vehicle to Grid is a concept where
an EV acts as an energy reservoir for
the grid (https://w.wiki/6RHk). An EV
has a convenient large battery, generally much larger than home energy
storage batteries, such as:
• Tesla Powerwall (13.5kWh; http://
siliconchip.au/link/abk3).
• Enphase Energy (10.08kWh for IQ
Battery 10; siliconchip.au/link/abjz)
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.21: the Open Charge Point Protocol (OCPP). EVSE is the Electric Vehicle
Supply Equipment, ie, the charging station, while CSMS is the charging system
management software. You don’t need to provide payment and charging details
separately with every charging station you pull up to, as long as they support
OCPP. Source: https://youtu.be/0exHWxV-uW8
Australia's electronics magazine
July 2023 23
Fig.22: the Wallbox Quasar offers
bidirectional power flow for V2G
applications.
Fig.23: a Ford F-150 Lightning connected to a home charging station. The vehicle
might be charging or operating in either V2G or V2H modes. Source: www.ford.
com/trucks/f150/f150-lightning/2022/features/intelligent-backup-power/
• LG Home Battery (16kWh for
RESU16H Prime; siliconchip.au/link/
abk2)
• sonnenBatterie Evo (10kWh;
siliconchip.au/link/abk1)
• Redflow ZBM3 (10kWh; http://
siliconchip.au/link/abk5)
• DCS PV Series (15kWh; http://
siliconchip.au/link/abk0)
• Zenaji Aeon (1.93kWh, expandable; siliconchip.au/link/abk4)
Note that some hybrid vehicles support V2G, but they have much smaller
batteries than dedicated EVs, so they
will not work as well in this role.
The way it works is when an EV is
plugged into a home charger, power
can flow bidirectionally to either
charge the EV battery from the grid
or discharge it and export the energy
into the home or back into the grid to
meet local demand.
As with grid-scale batteries, the
objective is to charge the battery when
power is cheap and use it in the home
or export it when power is expensive.
Still, you would want to avoid totally
discharging it, especially when you
might need to use it.
Of cars available in Australia, V2G
is supported by the Nissan Leaf (full
EV, 39kWh), Mitsubishi Outlander
PHEV (hybrid, 20kWh) and Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross (hybrid, 13.8kWh).
V2G Jetcharge (siliconchip.au/link/
abk6) are doing work in this area in
South Australia.
The Wallbox Quasar (siliconchip.
au/link/abk7), shown in Fig.22, is an
example of a bidirectional charger
What’s inside a DC fast charger?
DC fast chargers are essentially switchmode power supplies converting AC from
the mains grid to a variable DC voltage
at high power for battery charging. Of
course, they incorporate battery charging
logic, communications with the vehicle,
metering, communications with the owner
and everything else required to do the job.
All but the most basic fast chargers
will incorporate multiple switch-mode
units in parallel – see the adjacent photo.
For a start, it’s very difficult to design a
single device to deliver 100kW or more,
while it’s relatively easy to design a supply
capable of delivering, say, 10kW that can be
paralleled for more power delivery.
This also gives manufacturers the
flexibility to design one charger board and
then deploy it in a range of products, from
the low end to the high end.
suitable for V2G. It can charge or
discharge at up to 7.4kW, operating
between 150V and 500V and using
a CHAdeMO connector plus internet
connectivity.
Other carmakers supporting V2G
technology include:
• Volkswagen Group are building
V2G hardware into all their vehicles
that use their Second Generation Modular Electric Toolkit (MEB), a standardised EV platform. Vehicles on
this platform include various Audi,
Seat-Cupra, Skoda and Volkswagen
EVs using the Type 2 port.
• Porsche (part of VW) has been
testing the concept with the Taycan
EV; it may be able to be implemented
in future with a software update.
• The Ford F-150 Lightning pickup
truck in the USA supports V2G (see
Fig.23), although V2G is currently only
being tested: siliconchip.au/link/abk8
Tesla has not announced plans to
support V2G, although presumably,
they could implement it with a software upgrade in some models.
Before using V2G, consider whether
it will shorten the expected life of
your EV battery and whether the cost
of replacing it will be higher than the
Fig.25: the Kerb Charge system,
charging an EV in the street.
Source: www.kerbcharge.com.au
The power source for a Tesla V3 Supercharger being installed. Note the two rows of
what appear to be metal boxes containing switchmode converters. Source: https://
teslamotorsclub.com/tmc/threads/supercharger-beaverton-or.283907/page-2
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Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Hybrids vs EVs
Fig.24: power outlets on the Ford
F-150 Lightning pickup truck. Source:
same as Fig.23
benefits of the V2G connection.
Vehicle to Load (V2L) and
Vehicle to Home (V2H)
Vehicle to Load (V2L) refers to the
ability to plug mains-powered appliances into your EV, such as power tools,
floodlights or a kettle. This is useful for
tradesmen working at building sites
or recreational campers, for example.
With Vehicle to Home (V2H), a vehicle can be plugged into your home
via the right sort of charger interface,
to power your home during a power
outage. A variation of this is Vehicle to
Building (V2B), where a vehicle powers an entire building, or V2X, where
it powers ‘everything’, with bidirectional power flowing through a building to the grid.
V2L is available on EVs such as
the Hyundai IONIQ 5 (Fig.26) and
KIA EV6.
The Ford F-150 Lightning mentioned above also supports Vehicle to
Load (V2L) and Vehicle to Home (V2H)
during power outages.
Battery charging efficiency
According to tests by ADAC, a major
German car association, electrical
EVs are purely electric and only operate from a battery, while hybrids
combine an internal combustion engine (ICE) with a battery. In both cases,
regenerative braking is used to recover some kinetic energy into the battery
during braking. Plug-in hybrids are hybrids where the battery can also be
recharged from the mains.
One advantage of a hybrid over a regular ICE vehicle is that the engine
can mostly run at optimal efficiency, at a fixed RPM and throttle position, to
charge the battery and/or drive the wheels.
Not all models mentioned below are representative and are not
necessarily current or available in Australia or New Zealand. We have
included the range for all-electric EVs and plug-in hybrids on battery only.
All-Electric: Audi e-tron (336-444km), BMW i4 (510-590km), Hyundai
Ioniq electric (373km), Jaguar I-Pace (470km), Kia EV6 (484-528km), Lexus
UX300e (305km), Mini Cooper SE (200km), Mercedes-Benz EQA (480km),
Nissan Leaf (270-385km), Porsche Taycan (431-484km), Tesla Model 3
(491-614km), Tesla Model S (637-652km), Tesla Model X (580-547km),
Volvo XC40 Recharge Pure Electric (380-418km).
Parallel Hybrid: the ICE and electric motor are locked together and can
drive the vehicle individually or together, eg, Honda Insight. They usually
require the ICE to be running to move.
Mild Parallel Hybrid: like a parallel hybrid but with only a small electric
motor to keep various pumps and the aircon compressors running, and
provide extra power for acceleration: Honda Civic Hybrid, Honda Insight
2nd generation, Honda CR-Z, Honda Accord Hybrid, Mercedes Benz S400
BlueHYBRID, BMW 7 Series hybrids, General Motors BAS Hybrids, Suzuki
S-Cross, Suzuki Wagon R and Smart Fortwo.
Series-Parallel Hybrid: two drive motors are used, ICE and electric.
Depending on conditions, either motor can be used or both together,
coupled in such a way that each can contribute any amount of the total
power, eg, Toyota Hybrid Synergy Drive/Toyota Hybrid System II including:
Toyota Prius, Ford Escape and Fusion Hybrid, Lexus RX400h, RX450h,
GS450h, LS600h and CT200h.
Series Hybrid: driven by an electric motor and can function as an EV
when there is sufficient battery power, but an ICE drives a generator to
charge the battery: BMW i3 with Range Extender, Fisker Karma, Nissan Note
with ePower.
Plug-in Hybrid: a serial or parallel hybrid with a larger battery that can
act as a pure EV for shorter distances: MG HS Plus EV (52km), Ford Escape
ST-Line PHEV (69km), Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV (69km), Mini Countryman
All4 Hybrid (61km), Mercedes-Benz GLC 300e (46km), Range Rover Velar
(69km), BMW X5 xDrive50e (94-110km), Porsche Panamera (51km).
Note that the electric range of plug-in hybrids is limited; it’s 110km at
most in those examples and usually much less. Long journeys will still
invoke the ICE motor (still, many peoples’ commutes are within these
ranges, possibly even the round-trip).
Fig.26: an external V2L
interface on a Hyundai
IONIQ 5. There is also an
interior outlet. There is a
similar external adaptor
for the Kia EV6 as well as
an interior outlet. Source:
www.hyundai.co.nz/v2l
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
July 2023 25
Considerations for a home EV charger
If you want to buy an EV and charge it at home, here are some things to
consider:
01 The standard plug-in charger that comes with your EV will take many
hours, maybe days, to fully charge it. You need a dedicated hard-wired highpower charger to charge the car quickly. Still, the slow charger may be adequate if you only drive short distances or will leave it plugged in permanently
between trips that do not fully exhaust the battery.
02 Many different chargers are available. Some are ‘smart’, with various features; some support solar panels; some are bidirectional and support V2G (see
elsewhere). Choose one that suits your needs.
03 Consider whether you should buy a charger that supports standards from
the Open Charge Alliance (www.openchargealliance.org).
04 Unless you are offered an excellent deal, consider whether you need a
charger from your vehicle manufacturer that might only charge specific models. Would you be better off with a more generic model that will work on other
vehicles in your household (perhaps later purchases) or others you may buy in
future? Check that the charger will work with your proposed vehicle and does
not affect the vehicle warranty (it shouldn’t).
05 Make sure you get the right cable length to go between the vehicle and
the charger. You might usually charge it in a garage, but what if you sometimes
want to charge it on the driveway? It might be worth getting a longer cable.
06 If you have multiple vehicles in your household, you might need multiple
chargers to charge more than one car simultaneously. Will your household
power supply support that?
07 If charging from solar panels, ensure you have enough capacity, especially
for winter use. It is unlikely that you will be able to fully charge from solar panels unless you have a very large solar installation and can charge during most
of the day.
08 Charging your car might cause you to drain your solar battery. Will the
charger communicate with the battery and take power from the grid when necessary? Remember that there are substantial losses in charging from battery
to battery.
losses of between 10% and 30% occur
when charging an EV from a wall
socket at home, and losses of 5% to
10% occur when using a ‘wall box’
(dedicated hard-wired charger, presumably Level 2).
In their tests, the Renault Zoe lost
30% at the wall socket, while the most
efficient car was the Fiat 500e, which
lost only 5%. Further losses occur due
to some vehicles drawing power from
the grid to heat or cool the battery at
extreme temperatures.
Battery heating and cooling is very
important, since many early EVs that
lacked active battery temperature management experience shorter battery
lives with early reductions in range.
Converting battery power back to
motive power involves an additional
5% to 10% loss – see siliconchip.au/
link/abk9
Remember that those were only the
losses from the wall to the battery and
did not include grid losses or the inefficiencies of the power generation itself.
More links & videos
• A Daily Mail article highlighting
the difficulty of finding a charging
station that is not busy: siliconchip.
au/link/abjs
• “Towing with my Ford Lightning
EV Pickup was a TOTAL DISASTER!”
– youtu.be/3nS0Fdayj8Y
• “Can a generator charge your
Tesla?” – youtu.be/T92oxFrOA6M SC
09 Consider installing a three-phase power supply to your house if you don’t
already have it. This will allow more charging power (and less charging time).
My electrician said that adding three-phase power to a typical home would
start at about $3,000 plus utility fees. It will be more expensive if power is supplied to the house via underground cables rather than overhead wires.
10 If you live in an apartment complex, find out whether you can get permission from your owner’s corporation to install charge points, likely at your
expense. EVs have been banned at an underground parking garage in Germany
due to fire risk, and this ban could conceivably extend to underground garages
at apartment complexes, including in Australia. See siliconchip.au/link/abka
Editor’s note: from October 2023 in NSW, new apartments must have the
ability to charge electric cars; see siliconchip.au/link/abkb
11 What if you have to park your car on the street? Local councils have fined
some people when they have run cables from their houses across footpaths
to charge EVs. To alleviate this problem, some local councils are trialling
schemes where a cable is run from a resident’s home, under the footpath and
to a location near the gutter with a charging point, at your expense, of course
– $6,000 plus other costs. You would have to hope no one took the adjacent
parking space! See siliconchip.au/link/abjr
12 An Australian company that makes such charge points is Kerb Charge
(www.kerbcharge.com.au) – see Figs.25 & 27. But also keep in mind that there
are usually council regulations against blocking or placing obstacles on footpaths (eg, to ensure people in wheelchairs can get about), so you would need
to verify you would not get in trouble before installing such a device.
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Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
Fig.27: the inventor of the kerb
charger, Rod Walker from Kerb
Charge (www.kerbcharge.com.au).
Source: www.portphillip.vic.gov.au/
media/1uwb0n2f/img_1574.jpg
siliconchip.com.au
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