Mahle's new tech reduces winter cruising range loss in EV by 20%

The company says in addition to significantly reducing battery power consumption, it is easy to control and can be readily adapted to future vehicle architectures.

Autocar Professional BureauBy Autocar Professional Bureau calendar 29 Jul 2019 Views icon8137 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp

Modern electric vehicles present complex challenges for efficient thermal management throughout the year. Mahle says it should place as light a load on the drivetrain battery as possible, particularly in wintertime, for which it has developed a compact and economical system based on a heat pump (Integrated Thermal System—ITS) that can increase the winter cruising range by up to 20 percent.

The company says in addition to significantly reducing battery power consumption, it is easy to control and can be readily adapted to future vehicle architectures. Due to the lack of steadily available waste heat from the engine, most Evs today rely on direct resistive heating by electric heaters to heat cabin and traction battery in wintertime.

This extra load on the drive train battery in cold temperatures can reduce the cruising range of a fully charged EVs by up to half. In summer as well, the cruising range is shortened by the additional energy required for cooling the drive train battery and the interior of the vehicle.

As part of its field tests with a compact electric car, Mahle say it has demonstrated that its ITS reduces the loss of cruising range substantially, especially at cold ambient temperatures. The original vehicle used, equipped with conventional electric heating, started with a cruising range of 100 kilometres. When the vehicle was equipped with the ITS, the cruising range increased to 116 kilometres.

Laurent Art, director, Advanced Engineering Thermal Management at Mahle, said: "With the ITS from Mahle, we can improve cruising range by between seven and 20 percent, depending on the design, which drastically reduces the loss of cruising range in wintertime in particular.”

The ITS combines various thermal components into one system that functions in several modes. Central to its architecture is a semi-hermetic refrigerant circuit, comprising a chiller, a coolant-cooled condenser (i-condenser), a thermal expansion valve, and an electric drive compressor. The icondenser and the chiller have the same function as the condenser and evaporator in a conventional refrigerant circuit.

In this case, however, instead of exchanging heat with air, the refrigerant exchanges heat with the coolant, thus generating hot and cold coolant flows. The ITS uses R1234yf as a refrigerant and the conventional vehicle coolant as the medium for heat transport between the cooling circuit and the various heat sources and sinks in the vehicle.

In addition to the low cost and environmental benefits, the ITS presents design flexibility and adaptability as added advantages. The Tier 1 says it is conducting tests for control optimisation and other purposes in the Mahle climatic wind tunnel with the ITS installed in the vehicle. Together with American OEMs, Mahle says it is working on implementing additional performance and cost optimisations.

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