Skip to main content

Electric vehicle range extension innovation

The latest research into electric vehicles suggests that range extensions of 10% or even more can be achieved through the utilisation of smart traffic technologies. By combining information gleaned from real-time traffic information, road type and gradient and also vehicle payload, researchers at the University of California, Riverside believe they can optimise route and performance to extend the range of electric vehicles.
August 7, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The latest research into electric vehicles suggests that range extensions of 10% or even more can be achieved through the utilisation of smart traffic technologies. By combining information gleaned from real-time traffic information, road type and gradient and also vehicle payload, researchers at the University of California, Riverside believe they can optimise route and performance to extend the range of electric vehicles. The team was given a grant by the California Energy Commission to work on an algorithm that could use information such as traffic data and payload to provide drivers with an optimised route requiring the lowest energy consumption. This research follows on from an earlier project that revealed navigation systems designed to provide energy efficient routes can reduce fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions for internal combustion engine powered vehicles by anything from 5-15%.

While many electric vehicles offer working ranges of around 160km according to their manufacturers, actual range can vary from 80-220km. This is due to a combination of factors including ambient temperature, traffic volumes and gradients encountered along the route. Batteries typically perform less efficiently at lower temperatures, with range being reduced in winter time for example, while using heating or air-conditioning systems will further reduce range. Electric vehicles do not waste power when sitting with motors in a traffic jam as the motors are at rest, unlike internal combustion engine-powered vehicles that will generally have the engine idling. In this respect, electric vehicles are typically less wasteful of energy in dense traffic situations than internal combustion engine-powered vehicles. But, in slow speed, stop-go congestion an electric vehicle is not operating at optimum speed and is therefore running less efficiently.

The recent explosion in the market for GPS navigation systems has developed technology aimed at reducing distance travelled, but these systems do not typically optimise routes in terms of road gradients and have to be programmed to avoid congested areas. Continuous driving at optimum speeds, typically 80km/h, allows for greater range. Roads with steeper gradients may use more energy than slightly longer routes avoiding climbs. And choosing routes through built-up areas with traffic lights and junctions will slow a vehicle down and make for more inefficient use of energy.

The research team is based at the Center for 4106 Environmental Research and Technology (CE-CERT), which is part of the Bourns College of Engineering. The project will gather energy consumption data from electric vehicles being operated in a range of on-road conditions, including different speeds, congestion levels, road types, and gradients, as well as with different payloads. The data will then be analysed to provide models that can determine energy consumption and provide the basis for an eco-routing algorithm. This will then be programmed into a specially-modified navigation system and allow initial testing of the concept in an electric vehicle.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Doosan’s DL280-5 wheeled loader fronts the 12-model series
    February 28, 2018
    Doosan’s new DL280-5 wheeled loader is aimed specifically for waste, recycling and general industrial duties. The DL280-5 is the latest unit in the high-performance 12-model wheeled loader range of operating weights from 12-35 tonnes. It also comes as the company celebrates a milestone – 400,000 units sold in Doosan’s 40-year history. The front lift arm of the DL280-5 is powered by a closed centre hydraulic system with a 210 litre/min axial piston pump for maximum hydraulic performance without producing
  • Quarry operators improve on productivity
    February 13, 2012
    With capital expenditure plans being reduced, many quarry operators are using the funds available to improve on productivity with their existing equipment fleets. Claire Symes reports. The economic downturn has had a big impact on the aggregates production sector with many quarry operators looking to reduce costs and rationalise operations. The impact of this can be seen in the reduction of capital expenditure plans but the investments that are being made are focused on efficiency.
  • Key deals show strength of Tolling solutions sector
    September 26, 2013
    The world’s leading tolling solution providers have achieved significant deals in recent months emphasising the importance of their latest and proven technology. Guy Woodford reports Kapsch TrafficCom North America (Kapsch), part of Kapsch TrafficCom Group, has been awarded a five-year US$30 million contract by Canadian Tolling Company International (Cantoll). The contract will see the leading tolling technology manufacturer supply its next generation TDMA V6 Interior Transponder, also known as an onboar
  • Sustainable Construction with Topcon
    February 7, 2024
    Michael Gomes, vice president of sustainability and corporate social responsibility at Topcon, talks to Mike Woof, editor of World Highways magazine, about the use of technology to deliver sustainability in road construction.