The present disclosure relates generally to a vehicle, and more particularly to a vehicle that utilizes solar power as an energy source and the management of the solar power distribution.
Vehicles, such as a motor vehicle, utilize an energy source in order to provide power to operate a vehicle. While petroleum based products dominate as an energy source, alternative energy sources are available, such as methanol, ethanol, natural gas, hydrogen, electricity, solar or the like. A hybrid powered vehicle utilizes a combination of energy sources in order to power the vehicle. Such vehicles are desirable since they take advantage of the benefits of multiple fuel sources, in order to enhance performance and range characteristics of the vehicle, as well as reduce environmental impact relative to a comparable gasoline powered vehicle.
An example of a hybrid vehicle is a vehicle that utilizes both electric and solar energy as power sources. An electric vehicle is environmentally advantageous due to its low emissions characteristics and general availability of electricity as a power source. However, battery storage capacity limits the performance of the electric vehicle relative to a comparable gasoline powered vehicle. Solar energy is readily available, but may not be sufficient by itself to operate the vehicle. Thus, there is a need in the art for a hybrid vehicle with an improved photovoltaic energy distribution system.
Accordingly, the present disclosure relates to a photovoltaic storage and charging system. The system includes a photovoltaic apparatus disposed on the vehicle for absorbing radiant energy and converting the absorbed radiant energy into electrical energy. At least one energy storage device stores the electrical energy from the photovoltaic apparatus, and the stored electrical power is available for use by the vehicle. An electrical energy converter is disposed between the photovoltaic apparatus and the energy storage device, to receive the electrical energy from the photovoltaic apparatus, boost the energy to a predetermined level for charging the energy storage device and deliver the boosted electrical energy to the energy storage device.
An advantage of the present disclosure is continuous charging of a vehicle's energy storage device utilizing solar power is provided. Yet another advantage of the present disclosure is more efficient vehicle operation through energy distribution between low and high voltage energy storage devices is available. Still yet another advantage of the present disclosure is the opportunity to deliver solar power to high voltage battery devices. A further advantage of the present disclosure is that the system communicates with and stores energy within an energy storage device such as a battery. Still a further advantage of the present disclosure is that the energy generated from the solar panel can be stored for later distribution. An advantage of the present disclosure is that the solar panel covers a large surface area of the vehicle to improve radiant energy absorption. Still yet another advantage of the present disclosure is that the solar panel is split into independent modules to maximize efficiency at different solar radiation angles and partial shading conditions with MPP tracking.
Other features and advantages of the present disclosure will be readily appreciated, as the same becomes better understood after reading the subsequent description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to the
The vehicle 10 also includes a power train that is operable to propel the vehicle 10. In this example, the power train is a plug-in hybrid, and includes an electrically powered motor and motor controller. The vehicle 10 may also include a gasoline powered engine that supplements the electric motor when required under certain operating conditions. The electrical energy can be stored in an energy storage device, such as a battery, to be described. Various types of batteries are available, such as lead acid, or lithium-ion or the like. It should be appreciated that the vehicle 10 may include more than one type of battery or energy storage device. The battery supplies the power in the form of electricity to operate various vehicle components. In this example, there is a low voltage battery 70 that provides electrical power to vehicle components (e.g., a typical 12 V lead acid battery) and a high voltage battery 72 (e.g. over 60 V traction battery) and in this example a 400 V traction battery that provides electrical power to an electric drive motor. The batteries 70, 72 may be in communication with a control system that regulates the distribution of power within the vehicle 10, such as to the electric drive motor, or a vehicle component or other accessories or the like. In this example, the high voltage battery receives electrical energy from a plug-in source and a gasoline engine, and the low voltage battery 70 receives electrical energy from the high voltage battery or a photovoltaic source in a manner to be described. In a further example, the high voltage battery 72 and the low voltage battery 70 can receive electrical energy from a solar source.
Referring to
The solar panel 14 is operable to collect radiant energy from the sun and convert the sun's energy into stored electrical energy that is available for use in the operation of the vehicle 10. The solar energy is available to supplement that of the other energy sources, such as a plug in source or fossil fuel of this example. The supplemental solar energy effectively increases the performance of the vehicle 10, i.e. increased electric range for use by another vehicle feature or accessory.
The solar panel 14 includes a plurality of solar cells 20 arranged in a solar array as shown in
The solar panel 14 is divided into four sections or modules 22 that form electrically separate zones. The solar cells 20 are position within each module in a predetermined arrangement or pattern, such as an array. For example, each module may contains a 5 by 4 array of cells. The modules 22 themselves are connected by cross connector 24, or bus bars as shown in
The solar panel 14 may be fabricated using various techniques, the selection of which is nonlimiting. In an example, the solar panel is fabricated from a glass panel having a laminate structure. In another example, the photovoltaic system can be mounted or incorporated within a composite structure, such as integrally formed within a polymer or composite material. The solar module may be laminated within a durable polymer, such as a scratch resistant polycarbonate. In a further example, the solar modules 22 are mounted in a thin film, such as amorphous silicon or the like. In an even further example, the photovoltaic system includes modules 22 that are formed in other exposed vehicle structures, such as in a window. An organic solar concentrators or specially dyed window may be used that channels light to solar cells at their edges. Accordingly, the solar panel structure will influence characteristics of the vehicle such as weight, cost, packaging or the like.
Referring to
The solar panel 14 is operatively in communication with a solar charging system 34. To maximize solar energy, and thereby offset fuel usage, the energy generated from the solar panel 14 is stored. Typically, the energy is stored in the low voltage battery 70. Further, the solar charging system 34 may operatively be in communication with a vehicle charging system in a manner to be described. Each of the modules 22 in the solar panel incorporate a maximum power point (MPP) tracking feature that maximizes power output for various solar radiation angles and partial shading conditions of the solar panel 14 in a manner to be described. This feature assumes that if one cell 20 in a particular module 22 is shaded from the sun, then the performance of other cells on the module can also be diminished. Since each module 22 is electrically separate and isolated from the other modules and thus independent, the energy collection operation of the other available modules 22 may be optimized.
Referring to
Each module 22 includes electrical lines that deliver the voltage to the converter 36. The energy storage device or battery 70 includes a positive terminal 71a and a negative terminal 71b. The voltage from the module 22 is delivered to the converter 36 through a positive voltage input line 79a and a negative voltage input line 79b. The output of the converter 36 includes a positive output voltage line 79c and a negative output voltage line 79d that correspond to positive terminal 71a and negative terminal 71b respectively.
Depending on the available sunlight with respect to the vehicle position, the solar modules 22, or photovoltaic modules, can experience partial or full shading. Shading of a single cell can cause performance of the corresponding module to decrease. For example, a 3% shading can cause a 25% reduction in power. To minimize partial shading losses, each module 22 is electrically isolated from the others. Each module 22 includes its own maximum power point (MPP) tracking. MPP is the point on the current-voltage (I-V) curve of a solar module 22 under illumination, where the product of current and voltage is maximum (Pmax, measured in watts). The points on the I and V scales which describe this curve point are named Imp (current at maximum power) and Vmp (voltage at maximum power).
If the solar panel has a compound curvature (i.e., curving in multiple directions as shown in
Referring to
The solar charging system 34 can further include an accessory power module (APM) 40 that communicates with a DC/DC converter 73 to either boost or reduce voltage in the bidirectional energy flow between the low voltage battery 70 and a high voltage battery 72. For example, the DC/DC converter 73 used between a high voltage 72 and a low voltage battery 70 either boosts or reduces voltage depending on which direction the energy is flowing. The APM 40 monitors the energy flow to communicate with the solar charging system 34 to optimize energy distribution to the batteries 70 and 72.
The solar charging system 34 can further include a battery electronic control module (BECM) 42 that monitors the status and controls state of charge of the high voltage battery 72. It is understood, however, that the BECM 42 can be made to monitor the status and control states of charge for multiple energy storage devices, for example, the low voltage battery 70 and the high voltage battery 72. In a further example, alternative energy storage devices can be used such as a capacitor, multiple low voltage batteries, and the like. The solar charging system 34 includes a HCU 44, which is a controller that controls the high voltage contactors (not shown), such as the high voltage interlock. The HCU 44 may interface with other controllers, such as the vehicle control module (VCM) 46, APM 40, BMS 38, and/or BECM 42. The resulting charge is a steady state output. The VCM 46 manages the distribution of power between the photovoltaic apparatus 14, high voltage battery charging system, and electric motor.
Energy converted from the solar panel 14 can be used to charge the low voltage battery 70. Battery 70 can be used to further charge the high voltage battery. In an example, the low voltage battery is maintained below a predetermined threshold voltage in order to continuously receive energy form the solar panel 14. Accordingly, the vehicle 10 can be programmed to operate efficiently based on predetermined parameters and energy distribution between the photovoltaic apparatus 14, the low voltage battery 70, and the high voltage battery 72.
Referring to
In an example, a 12 V battery 70 is used as the low voltage battery 70. Battery 70 converts electrical energy to chemical potential energy for storage, and converts chemical potential energy to electric energy for use by devices. An example device, such as HVAC fan 110 uses electrical energy to serve various functions. The fan 110 can be powered by the boost converter 36 directly or by the 12V battery 70. In an example, controllers (VCM 46, HCU 44, APM 40, etc.) are used that communicate with various systems, store, and process data to control components. In a further example, a touch panel 112 is provided in the vehicle that allows users to interact with the photovoltaic system 14, e.g. to select how solar energy is used—for HVAC, charging, etc. It also displays information about the system's operation. Sensors, for example temperature sensor 113 connected to the HVAC controller 111, provide input to controllers to influence system operation. For example, in a certain mode, the vehicle may use solar power directly for ventilation rather than for charging if the cabin temperature rises above a threshold.
In an example, the low voltage battery 70 is depleted to a minimal acceptable state of charge (SOC) and caused to maintain that minimal level when the vehicle is on. This leaves more capacity to charge when the vehicle is off, thus increasing the utility of the photovoltaics and offsetting more fuel. If the battery 70 were maintained close to maximum SOC, the solar energy would only serve to maintain charge and not fully utilized for example with the high voltage battery 72.
In addition the high voltage battery 72 may be charged by the low voltage battery 70 which is continuously receiving energy from the photovoltaic apparatus 14. Generally, solar power is unlikely operable to maintain high voltage charging directly. Certain components like high voltage contactors may have a minimum threshold power to engage that the photovoltaic system 14 may not meet on its own. Accordingly, photovoltaics charge the low voltage battery continuously via DC/DC converter with MPP tracking until it reaches a threshold (such as almost full capacity), at which point the low voltage battery charges the high voltage battery via a boost converter at peak efficiency (relatively high power) until the low voltage battery reaches its minimum threshold, at which point high voltage charging ceases and low voltage photovoltaic charging continues. This process can repeat long as photovoltaic energy is available. Whereas a photovoltaic apparatus may only generate 130W, a low voltage battery 70 may be able to boost to high voltage at 600W via a boost converter 73 between the low voltage battery 70 and high voltage battery 72.
In an example, the high voltage battery is charged from the photovoltaic system via the bidirectional DC/DC converter as shown in
In an example, the bidirectional converter 73 typically does not boost and buck simultaneously. Accordingly, the solar panel 14 does not charge the high voltage battery 72 while the high voltage battery 72 powers low voltage components or when the low voltage battery 70 is charging. Accordingly energy paths 141 and 142 are mutually exclusive. For a system with a relatively small low voltage battery 70, this may mean that the system cannot capture solar energy while the vehicle is on. This would, however, only reduce the utility of the photovoltaic system marginally because often, solar charging occurs when the vehicle is parked. For a system with a normal or large low voltage battery 70, solar charging can still take place while the vehicle is on: Low voltage systems can run on energy stored in the low voltage battery 70, and the converter 73 can switch tasks to charge the low voltage battery periodically as necessary. In this scenario, the system only neglects potential solar energy when charging the low voltage battery 70. The system may include a direct connection to the low voltage bus 150 (no converter) from the photovoltaics 14, which the photovoltaic system 14 would switch to automatically when advantageous across switches 151. Accordingly, when voltage is sufficient to meet the requirements of the low voltage bus 150 (e.g. to charge the low voltage battery, as in
The hybrid vehicle may include other features conventionally known for a vehicle, such as a gasoline motor, other controllers, a drive train or the like.
Many modifications and variations of the present disclosure are possible in light of the above teachings. Therefore, within the scope of the appended claim, the present disclosure may be practiced other than as specifically described.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US10/21236 | 1/15/2010 | WO | 00 | 2/14/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61144976 | Jan 2009 | US |