Abstract

Today’s market leading electric vehicles, driven on typical UK motorways, have real-world range estimation inaccuracy of up to 27%, at around 10 °C outside temperature. The inaccuracy worsens for city driving or lower outside temperature. The reliability of range estimation largely depends on the accuracy of the battery’s underlying state estimators, e.g., state-of-charge and state-of-energy. This is affected by accuracy of the models embedded in the battery management system. The performance of these models fundamentally depends on experimentally obtained parameterisation and validation data. These experiments are mostly performed within thermal chambers, which maintain pre-set temperatures using forced air convection. Although these setups claim to maintain isothermal test conditions, they rarely do so. In this paper, we show that this is potentially the root-cause for deterioration of range estimation at low temperatures. This is because, while such setups produce results comparable to isothermal conditions at higher temperatures (25 °C), they fail to achieve isothermal conditions at sub-zero temperatures. Employing an immersed oil-cooled experimental setup, which can create close-to isothermal conditions, we show battery state estimation can be improved by reducing error from 49.3% to 11.7% at −15 °C. These findings provide a way forward towards improving range estimation in cold weather conditions.

Highlights

  • Reduction in fossil fuel consumption is a key avenue towards reducing rising worldwide carbon emissions [1]

  • The cells were chosen based on properties such as capacity, form factor and chemistry, making them comparable to cells used in popular passenger battery electric vehicles (BEVs) such as the Nissan Leaf [34]

  • Capacity measured at a particular discharge rate was decreasing with temperature, and cell surface temperature was higher at lower temperature, as expected [23,44,45]

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Summary

Introduction

Reduction in fossil fuel consumption is a key avenue towards reducing rising worldwide carbon emissions [1]. Electric vehicles (EVs) can potentially reduce fossil fuel consumption, and satisfy customer demands [2]. The percentage of EVs in global light vehicle production is expected to rise from

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