The invention relates in general to the technical field of electric vehicles, in particular to a vehicle charging station and to a method for charging, and to a battery-driven, non-railbound vehicle.
In local public transportation, battery-driven transport systems have long been known, for example from DE 24 05 198. Fully electric buses, the entire energy requirements of which are covered by the battery system carried on the vehicle, have recently been put into service. In the metropolitan area of Vienna, fully electric buses of this type are currently in service which obtain their drive power completely from a plurality of lithium ferrite batteries carried on the vehicle, said batteries having a total capacity of approximately 100 kWh. The batteries are accommodated on the roof and/or at the rear of the vehicle. These batteries are recharged within approximately 15 minutes during service hours, in each case at a terminal station on the bus line, and overnight when the fully electric bus is not in service. For charging, a button is pressed to extend a pantograph provided on the vehicle roof of the electric bus and to bring said pantograph into contact with a catenary line system above the electric bus. Before the start of the journey, the contact with the catenary line system is broken, again by a manual switching operation.
A disadvantage here is that the pantograph, together with the lifting and lowering device, has to be carried on the vehicle roof. This calls for additional drive power and reduces the payload of the vehicle. In addition, the lifting and lowering device comprises a plurality of moving parts. On the roof, the device, together with the drive technology, is exposed to the weather and is susceptible to faults. The design of the extendable pantograph takes up structural space on the vehicle roof which reduces the clearance height of the electric bus. Manual operations are required for the charging process. A charging process which proceeds automatically would be desirable.
An object of the present invention is to avoid the aforementioned disadvantages and to establish an approach by means of which as far as possible no moving parts of the on-board contact device are required for charging the energy accumulator of a battery-driven vehicle and the charging process can to a large extent be automated.
The object is achieved in a vehicle charging station according to the features of claim 1 and in a method for charging according to the features of claim 10 and in a vehicle according to claim 13.
The device-related object is achieved in that the following is provided:
As the electrical contact during charging is established by means of a station-side manipulator, no on-board pantograph with moving parts is required. The object of contacting is taken over by a manipulator fashioned in the manner of an articulated-arm robot, so the process of charging can proceed automatically. The on-board contact device is formed by fixed contact elements which are fixedly mounted either on the vehicle roof or on a side wall of the vehicle.
A substantial advantage is firstly that moving parts are no longer needed on board the vehicle.
A further advantage arises from the fact that the at least two-membered design of the manipulator makes it possible to compensate for the parking position of the vehicle. Even if the vehicle is not located exactly in the predefined parking position, the supply-contact device can be docked onto the vehicle. The two-membered design as a vertically articulated arm makes it possible for the clamping force between the contact surfaces to be maintained even if the bus moves during the charging process, for example, because persons embark or disembark.
It is favorable if the contact elements of the receiving-contact device are fashioned in the form of elongated contact strips which are arranged in the plane of the vehicle roof or of the side wall of the vehicle or in a plane parallel thereto. The contact surfaces of these contact strips can be kept comparatively small in terms of their dimensions so that the on-board contact device on the vehicle roof or on a side wall takes up only a small space. One of the advantages of this is that the on-board contact device can be arranged on both halves of the vehicle roof so that the bus can be charged from both sides, for example, even if driven into the parking position in the opposite direction to that envisaged.
It can be particularly favorable if the supply-contact device consists of four contact strips which are arranged in the shape of a cross and is fashioned such that an electrical contact can be made with four corresponding contact strips of the receiving-contact device, said corresponding contact strips being arranged in the shape of a square or rectangle.
In another particularly preferred embodiment, precisely the opposite is true: the supply-contact device consists of four contact strips which are arranged in the shape of a rectangle and the four corresponding contact strips of the receiving-contact device are arranged in the shape of a cross.
The advantage of these two particularly preferred embodiments is that the requirement for precision with regard to the positioning accuracy of the vehicle in the parking position can be reduced. In other words, the cross/square contact arrangement creates an advantageous range of tolerance in respect of the positioning accuracy for contacting, both in the direction of travel and in the lateral distance of the vehicle relative to the base.
A further advantageous design can be one in which not only are each of the articulated joints between the first member and the base and the second member and the first member driven by a rotary drive, but so is the articulated joint between the supply-contact device and the second member. This makes it possible to correct the position of the supply-contact device shortly before docking such that even in the event of the vehicle standing at a tilt caused by asymmetrical loading, the corresponding contact elements will lie opposite one another at approximately the same distance apart.
The method-related object is achieved in a method for charging the energy accumulator in a battery-driven vehicle, in particular an electric bus or a hybrid vehicle, the vehicle parking, for the purpose of charging, in a pre-defined parking position, with a vehicle charging station, comprising:
Motion of the individual members of the manipulator in a swivel plane (y-z plane) which is oriented approximately transverse to the direction of the longitudinal extension of the parking vehicle (x direction) is preferable here. Starting from an idle position, the docking onto the vehicle follows the “shortest” path.
In one embodiment, the rotary motion of the first member and/or of the second member proceeds automatically, controlled by a control device.
The object is also achieved in a battery-driven, non-railbound vehicle having a receiving-contact device with strip-shaped contact elements which are arranged in the shape of a cross or of a rectangle on the vehicle roof or on a lateral surface of the vehicle.
An easy way of fastening the individual contact elements is to embed them in a plate-shaped electrical insulator, the elements projecting from the plane of the plate.
To drain moisture away, it is favorable here if the plate-shaped insulator has the shape of a truncated pyramid and the contact elements are arranged approximately in the area of the edges of the top surface of the truncated pyramid.
In order to explain the invention further, reference will be made in the part of the description below to drawings in which further advantageous designs, details and further developments of the invention, based on a non-restrictive exemplary embodiment, can be found, in which
The vehicle 10 may be e.g. a fully electric bus of the type referred to in the introduction having a lithium ferrite accumulator which is charged in bus terminal stations.
The second arm 6 carries on its outer end a supply-contact device 8. When rotated about the axes of the joints 3 and 5 (see double-headed arrows 20 in
If the contacts of the contact devices 8, 9 are appropriately dimensioned, it suffices if the vehicle is located inside the markings of the parking position 24.
The dimension of the contacts can be smaller if the exact position of the vehicle 10 is known.
In order to determine the exact position of vehicle 10 in the parking position 24, a position-detecting device can be provided in the base 2, by means of which position-detecting device for example the distance 12 (y direction) to the vehicle and the precise x position in the parking position 24 can be determined. The detection of the position may for example be realized optically, by means of ultrasound or via radio.
The drives 31,51,71 are electrical positioning drives controlled by a control unit 26. The control unit 26 is located in the base 2. The control unit 26 controls the process for the establishment of the electrical connection between the contact devices 8,9 fully automatically. Hydraulic or pneumatic drives can also be used.
The swiveling motion of the members 4,6 occurs in a swivel plane (y-z plane) which is realized approximately transverse to the direction of the longitudinal extension of the parking vehicle (x direction).
A particularly preferred embodiment of the contact devices 8 and 9 is shown in
A substantial advantage of the invention is that moving contact elements are no longer required on board the vehicle. Without major changes to the silhouette of the vehicle, the contacts of the receiving-contact device 9 can either be arranged flush with the vehicle roof 13 or a side wall 21, or lie in a plane parallel thereto.
In the case of an arrangement of contacts on the roof, it is possible for both halves of the vehicle roof to be fitted with contacts, as a result of which the vehicle 10 can enter the parking position 24 in either direction of travel (in the x direction or in the opposing direction). As shown graphically in
Although the invention has been illustrated and described in detail by means of the preferred embodiments above, the invention is not as a consequence restricted to the disclosed examples. Other variations may be derived herefrom by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of protection of the invention.
Thus, the number of contacts is of course not restricted to three (positive, negative, ground) and may comprise multiple contacts. The manipulator may be formed of more than two members.
The receiving contact device does not have to be arranged on the vehicle roof or side wall, it is also conceivable for the on-board contact device to be located on the rear of the vehicle.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A50510/2014 | Jul 2014 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/064255 | 6/24/2015 | WO | 00 |