Abstract

Traditional air conditioning may be inappropriate for electric vehicles due to its moving parts noise besides using chlorofluorocarbons that harm the environment. In addition, it consumes a significant portion of the stored energy in batteries, reducing the vehicle's driving range. So, in this paper, a novel design of thermo-electric cooling (TEC) system coupled with a photovoltaic (PV) panel replacing the vehicle roof is studied. This system consists of a sandwich of PV panel outside the vehicle and TEC inside with a heat sink system integrated between them. The air temperature variation in the cabin during the daytime is predicted by solving a complete mathematical transient thermal model of the whole system before and after mounting the cooling system. The air streams through the vehicle moving are exploited to improve the TEC and PV system performance. The system performance is investigated for different cases during the day with and without including the PV output power and for the vehicle parks inside or outside. The results indicate that, for each scenario, the number of used TEC modules influences the system performance where the best number varies between 128 and 98. Coupling the PV panel with the TEC system reduces the daily required energy from batteries by about 19%. Running the TEC system during parking from 8 to 10 am decreases the cabin air temperature from 47.5 to 34°C while the input power declines by about 45%, which reduces the interior temperature to 25°C in 10 min (transition time). The contribution of the PV panel based on the studied conditions can increase the range of the vehicle by 10.4 km/day and about 160kWh/year energy saving. The reduction in the input power during transition time reaches 27.8% when the vehicle speed increases from 30 to 60 km/h, while this ratio declines to 10.8% as the vehicle speed rises from 60 to 90 km/h. During vehicle moving, powering the TEC system by the PV panel only can prevent the cabin temperature from rising over 40°C, whereas during parking, there is an optimum fan air velocity that gives the maximum reduction of the cabin temperature.

Full Text
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