CHeil402
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2020
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 726
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- 1,325
- Location
- King of Prussia, PA
- Vehicles
- 2017 Audi A4, 2021 MME
- Occupation
- Electrical Engineer
- Thread starter
- #61
Excellent questions. There's a lot to unpack here, so sorry if the answer runs long.Thanks for this! Great thread for us non EE’s and a great read!
So here is something I have been wondering about. The Mach E is said to have a “400 volt” system. Some newer cars like the Porsche Taycan have an ”800 volt system” that articles say can use thinner wiring and can allow for faster charging. Can you explain why and what the difference is?
And a second question . . . Why do these cars need the 12 volt battery anyway with that giant battery under the floor? We have already seen some members have issues with those batteries. Could a system be designed to run all power from the main HVB?
Part of the reason that a lot of EV suppliers went with 400 VDC is general availability of parts. The motors and power electronics were more readily available (which means cheaper). Secondly, the power you deliver to the motor (measured in Watts or W) is the product of the Voltage (measured in volts or V) and Current (measured in Amperes/Amps or A). That means if you increase the voltage you increase the power... however, doubling the power wasn't the main goal; halving the current was.
Sorry, but we need more technical background to explain why that's a benefit (I promise a less technical summary for those that don't need this level of detail). As I've mentioned before, in an ideal world all the power delivered to the load from the battery would be consumed by the load; however, the battery and wires have some level or resistance (measured in Ohms or Ω). When current flows through a resistance (e.g.: a wire), power is consumed and then burned as our old friend Joule heating that warms the conductors in the wire). Another equation to consider is that Power = Current ^2 * Resistance. That means that as current increases, the power lost in the wire increases exponentially! To reduce the lost heat, you need to increase the diameter of the wire (which reduces the wire's resistance). Current load is the driving factor in sizing your wires. Voltage only dictates the wire insulation thickness... that's why if you ever looked at Romex household wiring it has a 600 V stamp on it; that's the insulation's maximum rated voltage.
Commercial power distribution exploits this same physical property. That's why there are high voltage power lines and low voltage power lines. If a power plant wants to minimize the lost power in long distance delivery wires, they can step up the voltage to thousands of volts and put them up high (equivalent of more insulation), then step them down in transformers near customer houses. That's the glory of AC power and why it won the OG standards war for commercial power distribution over DC as AC power can have its voltage changed very easily using a transformer... but that's a history lesson/topic for another post.
Long story short, increasing the voltage allows you to decrease the current. Decreasing the current allows you to either: use smaller wires, or more importantly, deliver more power using the same wires. Therefore, a higher voltage allows you to charge faster because it exploits the limiting factor which is maximum current.
Now for the second question... and the award for first person to use one of my recommended questions! Why do we have a 12 V battery anyway since we have a big high voltage battery? This is actually a two part question. So first, why do we use 12 V and second, why do we have a low voltage battery?
We use a low voltage battery predominately for safety. Anything below 50 VDC is generally considered "touch safe voltage". Meaning the ideal resistance of your skin will keep the resultant current of you touching that voltage below dangerous levels. That being said... I'm not recommending you go around proving that. Drawing a little information from my industry again, some subway systems operate at about 750 VDC. And on older subway cars in the early 20th century (you know before safety was invented) actually did use that voltage for everything, including passenger lighting. Which would mean that if someone broke the light or a maintainer had to replace that light, they were directly exposed to potentially lethal voltage. Now we use a lower voltage to mitigate that risk and use a DC to DC converter to step down the voltage to a touch safe level. 12 V in particular was just a number that was an easy multiple to get to using lead acid battery chemistry and so that's what the automotive industry picked (although it's actually closer to 13.8 VDC but that certainly doesn't roll off the tongue like 12 V does). For reference, most US trains use 37.5 VDC.
The second part to the second part of this long post, is why do we need a low voltage battery at all, why not just use a DC/DC converter? And the answer to that is that the MME actually does this already. The 12 V battery is (supposed to) be recharged by the high voltage battery using the onboard DC/DC converter since the capacity of the 12 V battery is pretty low and would be consumed very quickly (which is what you're seeing in the other posts when it isn't properly recharged). However, for the above-mentioned safety reasons when the car is off we want to isolate that pesky dangerous high voltage by opening contactors... but when we do that, how do we close them again? Plus, when the car is off we still want some systems on the car to remain awake and phone home for those sweet sweet OTA updates. Therefore, we put in a low voltage battery to act essentially as a buffer for the DC/DC converter to store some power for when the car is off and to act as a backup if there are any hiccups with the DC/DC converter. Pulling more train analogies (not to get this already long answer "off the rails"... sorry), when there is a gap in the third rail that delivers that high voltage, we don't want the lights to turn off, so we use the low voltage battery to fill in the gap (even though we have a large DC/DC converter) that under normal conditions is what powers the low voltage side of things. Now one feature that trains have that I think Ford wishes the MME had, is what's called a "dead battery start" where you effectively can manually close those contacts that isolated the high voltage battery from the DC/DC converter to kick it back on and start recharging the battery when the battery is dead... maybe next model year.
In summary, the 12 V battery acts as a buffer for the high voltage battery DC/DC converter and is used to keep systems alive after the car is turned off and to turn the high voltage systems back on. We use a 12 V battery simply because they're readily available and a lot of existing car electronics expect this voltage to operate.
That's a lot to digest, so feel free to reach out with follow up questions.
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