The invention relates generally to the technical area of electric vehicles, in particular a charging station and a method for charging an energy accumulator in an electric vehicle.
Within the local public transport field, battery-driven transport systems have long been known, for example from DE 24 05 198. Recently, fully electric buses are also being employed, whose entire energy requirements are covered via the on-board battery system. In the urban area of Vienna, fully electric buses of this kind are today already in use, which derive their drive power totally from multiple on-board lithium-ferrite batteries with a total capacity of around 100 kWh. The batteries are here in part accommodated on the roof or at the rear of the vehicle. These batteries are recharged within around 15 minutes during the operating time in each case at a terminus of the bus line and overnight, if the fully electric bus is not in operation. For charging purposes a pantograph provided on the vehicle roof of the electric bus is extended at the press of a button and brought into contact with an overhead line above the electric bus. Before the start of the journey, contact with the overhead line is once again broken by means of a manual switching action.
It is here disadvantageous that the pantograph including the elevation and lowering apparatus is carried on the vehicle roof. This calls for additional drive energy and reduces the payload of the fully electric bus. In addition the elevation and lowering apparatus comprises multiple moving parts. Along with the drive technology on the roof they are exposed to unfavorable climatic conditions and are susceptible to disruption. In addition the structure of the extendable pantograph on the vehicle roof occupies structural space which limits the drive-through height of the electric bus. Manual switching actions are required for the charging process. A charging process which proceeds automatically would however be desirable.
It is an object of the present invention to avoid the aforementioned disadvantages and to create an approach with which if possible no on-board contact device with moving parts is required for charging of the energy accumulator of a battery-driven vehicle and wherein the charging process is largely capable of automation.
The object is achieved by means of a charging station for an electric vehicle according to the features of claim 1, by means of a method according to the features of claim 7, and by means of a vehicle according to the features of claim 11.
Advantageous embodiments, aspects and particular details of the invention derive from the respective dependent claims, the description and the appended drawing.
The invention is based on the idea that during the charging of the energy accumulator of a stationary electric vehicle located in a pre-defined parking position, rather than an on-board contact device docking with an overhead line network, the station-based contact device is movable.
The inventive charging station comprises
A significant advantage stems from the fact that an on-board pantograph with moving parts is no longer required. The weight of each vehicle is correspondingly lower. The on-board contact apparatus can be simply embodied, for example by means of strip-like contact elements, which are essentially arranged on the vehicle roof flush with the vehicle profile. The contact device on the vehicle roof is thus robust and less susceptible to disruption as regards climatic influences. The procedure for charging can be automated.
In one preferred embodiment, the contact device arranged on the vehicle roof is formed by an arrangement of at least two longitudinal contact strips. Because of their size, these contact strips are dimensioned such that within a prescribed parking position tolerance an electrical connection can be reliably created between the contacts conducting the charging voltage which are guided to the vehicle by means of the pivoting movement of the pivoting and the on-board contacts. The contact strips can here be arranged either in the direction of the longitudinal extension of the vehicle or transversely to this on the vehicle roof. As a result the parking position tolerance limit in the first case in the direction of travel, and is increased in the second case transversely to the direction of travel.
A very particularly preferred embodiment can provide for the station-based contact device to have four contact strips arranged in the form of a cross, which interact with corresponding contact strips, which are arranged on the vehicle roof in the form of a rectangle. It is here favorable if the contact strips of the cross are of the same length, and the contact strips of the rectangle form lateral sections of a square. A favorable tolerance range for the pre-defined parking position of the vehicle thereby results, both in the direction of travel and transversely to the direction of travel. It is sufficient if the vehicle-parking position lies within these boundaries.
In another preferred embodiment it can also conversely be provided that the station-based contact device, that is that contact device which is lowered onto the vehicle roof by the pivoting movement, comprises four contact strips arranged in the form of a square or rectangle, and contact sections in the form of a cross are arranged on the vehicle roof.
As regards the establishing of a good contact it can be favorable if the rotary drive is an electrical positioning drive and the second revolute joint is operatively coupled with this rotary drive in such a way that in the working position (charging position) contact elements of the supply-contact device are aligned essentially parallel to the plane of the vehicle roof and lie flat against corresponding contact elements of the receiving-contact device, held by spring force.
The problem set out in the preamble is also solved by a method for charging the energy accumulator in a battery-driven vehicle, wherein the vehicle is brought into a predefined parking position and wherein a charging station having the following is used:
Wherein the method has the following method step:
It is here favorable if the pivoting movement between the idle position and the working position takes place in a pivoting plane which is arranged essentially at right angles to the direction of the longitudinal extension of the vehicle parking in the parking position. It is thereby possible that the articulated arm, both on a vehicle parked on one side of the base, and also alternately on a vehicle parked on the opposite side of the base, pivots and makes the contact for charging.
If the rotary drive is controlled by an electrical control device, to which the signal from a parking position detection device is fed, it is possible for the charging process to proceed fully automatically.
The invention also relates to a battery-driven vehicle, in which a receiving-contact device is attached fixedly to the vehicle roof or a side wall, which has longitudinal contact strips, which are arranged either in the form of a cross or in the form of a square/rectangle. As already mentioned, the position of the vehicle in the parking position can then vary within boundaries prescribed by the cruciform or square shape and does not need to be so precise.
It is here advantageous if the individual contact strips or contact strips are embodied from a material of good electrical conductivity, e.g. copper, and are embedded at least in part in a contact plate made of an electrical insulator.
Advantageously, the contact plate is a truncated pyramid, which is fixedly mounted with its base surface on the vehicle roof. The contact strips are arranged on the top surface of the truncated pyramid facing away from the base surface and can protrude from this top surface. Thanks to the sloping lateral surfaces of the truncated pyramid, rainwater which occurs is effectively deflected.
For further explanation of the invention reference will be made in the next part of the description to drawings from which further advantageous embodiments, details and developments of the invention are to be derived on the basis of a non-limiting exemplary embodiment.
Wherein:
As will be explained in greater detail below, the revolute joint 7 is operatively connected to the rotary drive 31.
The
For charging of the energy accumulator 17 of the battery-driven vehicle 5 the vehicle 5 is thus initially moved into a prescribed parking position 24 and parked there. The supply-contact device 8 of the articulated arm 4 is then lowered onto the vehicle roof 10 by means of a pivoting movement, so that an electrical connection can be made between contacts of the supply-contact device 8 and corresponding contacts of the receiving-contact device 9. As stated, this lowering takes place via a rotary movement of the articulated arm 4, which is mounted in the revolute joint 3 of the base 2 and is driven by a rotary drive 31 which is not represented in greater detail.
The rotary drive 31 is a position-regulated electrical drive, which is coupled with the revolute joint 7 in an operative connection. This coupling can be embodied mechanically (connecting rods), or by the joint 7 likewise being driven by a drive which is not represented in greater detail. In this way a defined position of the contact device 8 relative to the roadway 6 or vehicle roof 10 can be set, for example parallel to the road surface 6. It is thereby possible that within certain limits, height differences between on-board contact device 9 and roadway 6 can be compensated for. These height differences can for example stem from different loading, unevenly distributed loads, changes in tire pressure or the type of vehicle. The rotary drive 31 need not be electric, but can also be a controlled pneumatic or hydraulic drive. The individual contact elements of the supply-contact device 8 can be embodied in a different manner, for example metal brushes, which are pre-tensioned with a spring.
The drawing in
The drawing in
The receiving-contact device 9 is arranged in a static manner on the vehicle roof 10, and has no moving parts. It comprises contact strips or contact strips, which are embedded in an insulator-contact plate in a plane parallel to the plane of the vehicle roof 10.
The electrical energy for charging the vehicle battery 17 is here taken from an energy supply network, which is not further represented here. The charging process is here controlled by a control device 18 arranged in the base 2. The control device 18 also controlled the rotary drive 31, so that the establishment of the electrical contact and the charging process are automatically initiated, as soon as the vehicle 5 is located within prescribed boundaries of a pre-defined parking position 24 and is released for charging.
A position detection device 15 here monitors the correct parking position 24 of the vehicle 5. This position detection device 15 can for example contain a device for measuring the distance 13 (y-direction) between the column-shaped base 2 and the side wall 16 of the vehicle 5, and a recording of the position in the direction of travel (x-direction). If the vehicle 5 is located outside a pre-defined parking position 24, an automatic charging process will then not be performed and this incorrect position of the vehicle 5 is indicated by means of an acoustic and/or optical signal.
As shown in
The idle position of the articulated arm 4 can differ depending on the characteristics of the operating site.
The
A particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention is shown in schematic form in
The individual contact strips or contact strips are made of copper and in each case embedded in contact plates 19, 22 made from an electrical insulator.
In
The arrangement of the on-board contact device 9 can be arranged on one half of the vehicle roof 10 or on both. In the latter case a charging process for the vehicle 5 is possible in both directions of entry into parking position 24.
Although the invention has been illustrated and described in greater detail by means of the preferred exemplary embodiment, the invention is not limited by the example disclosed, and other variations can be derived by the person skilled in the art, without departing from the protective scope of the invention.
It is for example conceivable that the articulated arm is embodied from individual rotary-driven partial articulated arms, wherein each of these arms is embodied with individual contacts, for example one arm per pole. The partial arms can be mounted individually or together in the joint 3.
In the drawings the contact strips are represented as rectangles; other shapes are of course conceivable.
The arrangement of the contact strips in a rectangle or in a discontinuous cross is of course not limited solely to the forms represented and described in the drawing, but can also comprise other forms with in each case more than four station-based or on-board contact strips.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 50508/2014 | Jul 2014 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/064079 | 6/23/2015 | WO | 00 |