Archive for category the cars

Next Stop: Ultracapacitor Buses

Municipal transit agencies have tried to reduce the carbon footprint of their bus fleets using a range of options over the years, from biofuels and hydrogen to batteries and hybrid-electric diesel. Now a Chinese company and its U.S. partner say that ultracapacitors could offer the greenest and most economical way of powering inner-city buses.

Fast charger: A bus that runs entirely on ultracapacitors charges up at a bus stop in Shanghai. The buses can only travel three to five miles between charges, but the ultracapacitors allow for fast recharging at designated bus stops.  Credit: Sinautec Automobile Technologies

Fast charger: A bus that runs entirely on ultracapacitors charges up at a bus stop in Shanghai. The buses can only travel three to five miles between charges, but the ultracapacitors allow for fast recharging at designated bus stops. Credit: Sinautec Automobile Technologies

There’s just one catch: the best ultracapacitors can only store about 5 percent of the energy that lithium-ion batteries hold, limiting them to a couple of miles per charge. This makes them ineffective as an energy storage medium for passenger vehicles. But what ultracapacitors lack in range they make up in their ability to rapidly charge and discharge. So in vehicles that have to stop frequently and predictably as part of normal operation, energy storage based exclusively on ultracapacitors begins to make sense.

Sinautec Automobile Technologies, based in Arlington, VA, and its Chinese partner, Shanghai Aowei Technology Development Company, have spent the past three years demonstrating the approach with 17 municipal buses on the outskirts of Shanghai. On October 21, the two companies will offer a one-day demonstration at American University in Washington, DC, where an 11-seat minibus running on ultracapacitors will spend the day shuttling people around campus.

The trick is to turn some bus stops along the route into charge stations, says Dan Ye, executive director of Sinautec. Unlike a conventional trolley bus that has to continually touch an overhead power line, Sinautec’s ultracapacitor buses take big sips of electricity every two or three miles at designated charging stations, which double as bus stops. When at these stations, a collector on the top of the bus rises a few feet and touches an overhead charging line. Within a couple of minutes, the ultracapacitor banks stored under the bus seats are fully charged.

“It’s a brilliant concept,” says ultracapacitor expert Joel Schindall, professor of electrical engineering and computer science at MIT. “It’s not well suited for electric-only cars, but it is practical to stop a bus every few city blocks.”

The buses can also capture energy from braking, and the company says that recharging stations can be equipped with solar panels (although this is mainly to further the perception that the vehicles have a lower carbon footprint). Ye says the buses use 40 percent less electricity compared to an electric trolley bus, mainly because they’re lighter and have the regenerative braking benefits. They’re also competitive with conventional buses based on fuel savings over the vehicle’s 12-year life, based on current oil and electricity prices. Sinautec estimates that one of its buses has one-tenth the energy cost of a diesel bus and can achieve lifetime fuel savings of $200,000.

“The ultracapacitor bus is also cheaper than lithium-ion battery buses,” says Ye. “We used the Olympics (lithium-ion) bus as a model and found ours about 40 percent less expensive with a far superior reliability rating.” Ye adds that the environmental benefits are compelling. “Even if you use the dirtiest coal plant on the planet, it generates a third of the carbon dioxide of diesel when used to charge an ultracapacitor.”

Buses in the Shanghai pilot are made by Germantown, TN-based Foton America Bus Co, which uses ultracapacitors manufactured by Shanghai Aowei. The ultracapacitors are made of activated carbon and have an energy density of six watt-hours per kilogram. (For comparison, a high-performance lithium-ion battery can achieve 200 watt-hours per kilogram.) Clifford Clare, chief executive of Foton America, says another 60 buses will be delivered early next year with ultracapacitors that supply 10 watt-hours per kilogram.

“The ones in Shanghai right now have been on the road for three years without incident, without failure whatsoever, which in the bus industry is phenomenal,” says Clare, who adds that his company is in talks with New York City, Chicago, and some towns in Florida about trialing the buses. “It will end up being a third generation of the product, which will give 20 miles [of range per charge] or better.”

Sinautec is also in discussions with MIT’s Schindall about developing ultracapacitors of higher energy density using vertically aligned carbon nanotube structures that give the devices more surface area for holding a charge.

“So far we’re able to get twice the energy density of an existing ultracapacitor, but that’s not enough,” says Schindall. “We’re trying to get about five times.” Schindall says that this would create an ultracapacitor with one-quarter of the energy density of a lithium-ion battery.

“Right now the [Foton] buses can only go every other stop, a range of about 5 or 10 city blocks, and that’s okay for some routes, but here in the Boston area that would be too far [between charging spots],” Schindall adds. “If they could double that, or even quadruple that, it would increase by an order of magnitude the numbers of routes for which it could be a technical solution.”

There are some other important limitations. The 41-passenger buses, based on current technology, have a maximum speed of just 30 miles per hour, lose 35 percent of their range when air conditioning is turned on, and have weak acceleration. But even under these conditions, they could still prove practical for municipal, campus, airport, and tourist buses.

We want to replace a large portion of the diesel fleet in the United States

“We want to replace a large portion of the diesel fleet in the United States,” says Ye. “We do need to have charging stations throughout various points of the network, but as energy density goes up, the number of stations will go down.”

via Technology Review: Next Stop: Ultracapacitor Buses.

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OMG US states to ban txting + driving

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‘Distracted Driving Summit’

The US government wants to crack down on teens texting their BFF Jill from behind the wheel through federal action and public education.

The Department of Transportation today convened a two-day “Distracted Driving Summit,” gathering lawmakers, experts, advocates, and automakers to mull plans and recommendations on the dangers of text-messaging and other forms of automobile interference.

Last year, 5,870 people in the US died and about 515,000 were injured in reported crashes involving driver distraction, according to statistics trotted out for the event. Driver distractions were involved in 16 per cent of the country’s fatal crashes in 2008.

“To put it plainly, distracted driving is a menace to society,” said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood in his opening address to the summit. “Distracted driving is an epidemic and it seems to be getting worse every year.”

LaHood said tomorrow he will announce actions that the department will be taken at a federal level to deal with the problem, but added that legal action alone is an ineffective way to curb careless driving behavior. “You can’t legislate behavior,” he said. “Taking personal responsibility is the key to this solution.”

The new data points to the largest proportion of distracted drivers are those age 20 and under. Sixteen per cent of all under-20 drivers in fatal crashes were reported to have been distracted while driving, the government cites. But the problem is more widespread than inexperienced youths, said LaHood.

“Across the board, federal researchers who have directly observed drivers of all ages found that more and more people are using a variety of hand-held devices while driving,” he said. “Not just cell phones, but also iPods, video games, BlackBerrys, and so fourth. They’re doing it every day of the week, in the rain, and with kids in the car. And we know this problem isn’t limited to private citizens. Incredibly, bus drivers, train operators, truck drivers, and even school bus drivers have allowed distractions to interfere with their work.”

LaHood evoked the case of a California commuter train engineer who allegedly missed a red signal because he was busy texting a friend, killing 25 and injuring 135.

Like most seatbelt laws in the US, distracted driving legislation is left to individual states to decide. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia have passed laws making texting while driving illegal, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, and 9 states ban young drivers from texting while driving. But some lawmakers want to strong-arm all 50 states into similar laws.

Democrat Charles Schumer is championing legislation that would require states to ban texting or e-mail while driving a motor vehicle or lose 25 per cent of their annual federal highway funding. (By the way, that’s how the US enforced a 55 mph (90 km/h) national speed limit from 1974 to 1995.)

“We need every state to put safety first,” Schumer told the summit. ®

via OMG US states to ban txting + driving • The Register.

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Better Place debuts EV services platform at Frankfurt Motor Show

Names additional ecosytem players for scaling up production and on track for global deployment plans including first switchable battery EV from Renault

Better_Place_logo_20090501
Frankfurt (Sep 15, 2009) — Today, at the Frankfurt Motor Show, Better Place marked its next major technology milestone by demonstrating its electric vehicle (EV) services platform for making electric cars more convenient and affordable than internal combustion engine cars, unleashing a new era for wide-scale EV adoption. In conjunction with Renault’s unveiling of the world’s first switchable battery EV for Israel and Denmark, Better Place announced a newly expanded agreement with Renault, committing both companies to a volume of at least 100,000 electric cars in both countries by 2016.

As global demand for EVs builds and production scales so must the infrastructure. As a result, Better Place also named additional ecosystem players including Continental of Germany, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft, and TÜV Rheinland as Better Place seeks to scale up global production of its EV services platform and infrastructure deployment capabilities.

“Next year will be an exciting year for the auto industry and for consumers as the first wave of electric cars hit the streets,” said Shai Agassi, Better Place Founder and CEO. “The industry needs to continue to overcome the obstacles of extended range, price and impact on the grid if we’re going to be able to deliver a better experience than what consumers currently get. Better Place is committed to working with existing and emerging players in this exciting new category, which has the potential to drive the industry to sustainable growth in the near term and beyond.”

Better Place showcased its EV services platform, which manages at scale the charging of electric cars and the impact on the grid, moments after Renault unveiled its five-seat, electric sedan designed and developed for initial introduction for Better Place subscribers in Israel and Denmark in 2011. Additional switchable EV models from Renault are currently under review.

To enable mass market EV adoption, the Better Place solution includes interfaces designed to support all kinds of electric vehicles announced and under development, thereby providing a comprehensive infrastructure that the automotive and utility industry can count on for the transition to EVs. It’s the combination of infrastructure – to physically charge the car – and the “information train” of data – which is used to optimize the charging and manage the grid – that forms the heart of the EV services platform.

Inside the car, Better Place manages the vehicle’s energy plan through an on-board computing platform, codenamed “AutOS.” The AutOS platform performs complex energy calculations to create a personalized energy plan for each driver.

Outside of the car, Better Place has architected a master data center, which acts as the “brain” of the network. The Better Place data center enables “smart charging” of all electric cars on the network by optimizing and prioritizing when, where and how much each car is charged. Doing so minimizes the impact on local utilities while carefully orchestrating the state of charge for all batteries on the network so that every car is “topped up.”

As a centrally controlled function, the data center integrates any data across the entire network including: the availability of charge spots and battery switch stations; the state of charge of each battery; the ability to harness peak levels of renewable energy generation; topography maps and traffic patterns; and driving habits and patterns.

By integrating the data, Better Place has a 360-degree view across the entire network of charge spots, battery switch stations, electric cars, batteries and local utilities, enabling an entire ecosystem of industry players to deliver a more convenient and affordable electric car.

Better Place Expands Ecosystem to Include Continental, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft and TÜV

As Better Place readies for system-wide testing in Israel next year, the company identified additional industry players with global scale and cross-industry expertise including the automotive supplier Continental, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft and TÜV Rheinland.

For the production of charge spots, Better Place today announced that it has signed an agreement with Flextronics, one of the world’s leading electronics manufacturing services provider. Better Place awarded the contract to Flextronics because of its ability to give Better Place competitive advantage through Flextronics’ global scale and expertise across the industries that Better Place intersects, namely automotive, infrastructure and consumer devices.

Better Place and Flextronics will jointly engineer, develop and stress-test 1,000 next generation charge spots in the field before deciding to scale up volume to 100,000 production-grade charge spots by 2011. Such an order will represent the largest order for charge spot production in the history of the industry. Better Place currently is field testing nearly 800 charge points in Israel in a variety of private and public locations including curbside locations, parking lots, shopping malls and private residences.

Better Place, which is an active participant in the global standards bodies, will demonstrate charge spot standards’ compliance with the world’s two leading charging connector standards – IEC 62196 and J1772 – in Frankfurt.

Better Place R&D is working closely with Continental of Germany and Intel and Microsoft R&D, developing the most modern computing platform for inside the car. Better Place is developing its AutOS in-car platform with Continental to produce in volume an automotive-grade head unit, which incorporates Microsoft Windows Embedded and is powered by the Intel® AtomTM processor. The combination gives AutOS the extra horsepower needed to quickly conduct energy management and planning calculations that form the cornerstone of enabling peace of mind for drivers. The always-on connectivity of the unit also enables the “connected car” to seamlessly communicate with all of the components of the Better Place network.

“We at Continental are pleased that we are doing our part to help Better Place on its way to success,” said Helmut Matschi, President of the Interior division and member of the Executive Board of Continental AG. “The connection between the car, the Better Place network and the driver is ensured by the head unit we will develop. We look forward for the start of series production.”

By building an open architecture platform on industry-standard building blocks from Continental, Intel and Microsoft, Better Place will enable developers to build innovative applications on the AutOS platform much like the innovations that have sprung from the Apple iPhone. The AutOS system works by tapping into a limited number of standard CAN messages that all cars use to communicate diagnostics by read-only, giving OEMs an easy on-ramp to plug into the entire Better Place system.

In Israel, both Intel and Microsoft also have signed up as Better Place “Vision Partners,” agreeing to transition to electric vehicles when commercially available in 2011.

“At Microsoft, we are committed to software and technology innovations that help people and organizations around the world improve the environment,” John Fikany, Microsoft, VP, Commercial Sector Industries. “Better Place’s vision for accelerating the transition from oil-based transportation to a sustainable mobility model will help to draw in a new ecosystem of players and innovations all aimed at fighting climate change. We view electric cars as roaming consumer electronic devices, which have the potential to move from niche product to mainstream, and we’re excited that Better Place is developing their solution using Microsoft technology.”

“There’s a natural technology intersection between enabling powerful, yet energy efficient computing platforms and the drive toward electric transportation,” said Staci Parmer, director of in-vehicle infotainment for Intel. “We see an obvious fit for the Intel® AtomTM processor in the Better Place solution to enable a unique, connected experience for the next generation of electric transport.”

Finally, Better Place also announced that it has signed a cooperation agreement with TÜV Rheinland, a global provider of technical, safety and certification services, to evaluate and certify the safety of the network as a first step of broad deployment certification, which will be standard in all Better Place geographies.

Better Place On Track to Deliver Globally as Demand Builds

To date, Better Place has signed up orders from more than 50 Vision Partners in Israel – representing a total car park of approximately 35,000 ICE (internal combustion engine) vehicles – which have committed to convert a portion of their ICE fleets to Better Place when commercially available in 2011. These fleet customers include the Israel operations for multi-national companies including Cisco, FedEx and IBM, among others.

In Denmark, Better Place is currently building similar demand among visionary companies. Better Place already has announced several partnerships with municipalities and a partnership with the local insurance company, TrygVesta, which will offer a 40% discount on insurance premiums for owners of EVs. For the UN Summit on Climate Change (COP15) in Copenhagen in December, Better Place will build a showcase to celebrate the EV as a scalable solution for fighting climate change.

In Australia, Better Place recently announced Canberra, the nation’s capital, as the site for its first citywide roll out of electric vehicle infrastructure in Australia where the company is on track for 2012 commercial availability.

In North America, Better Place has worked actively with local partners and government in Ontario, Canada, the San Francisco Bay Area and Hawaii to create the necessary conditions to foster a competitive EV marketplace. These three regions have made a commitment to accelerating the adoption of EVs through progressive policies aimed at consumer adoption, streamlining infrastructure deployment and in some cases, adding EVs as a competitive alternative for public sector procurement policies.

In Japan, Better Place recently won the first-of-its-kind project from the government to demonstrate electric taxis with switchable batteries. The company will kick off the demonstration in January 2010.

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China’s controversial Polish contract

At a dusty building site on the fringes of Warsaw, globalisation has just taken its latest twist – and it’s one which will send tremors through Europe’s construction industry.

Two decades after the fall of communist rule, a Polish government with an almost fundamentalist commitment to the free market has awarded contracts for two large motorway sections to a Chinese state-owned company that won the job with a dramatic knock-down bid.

It is the first time the Chinese have won such a contract in Poland and it is believed to be a first within the EU.

But instead of just cutting the price, they slashed it to pieces, offering to build the road for 60% less than the guide price – saving taxpayers millions, but leaving many wondering how they can do it so cheaply without pain.

Work is already under way on the interchange where the Lodz-Warsaw motorway will arrive in the Polish capital.

Stopping the traffic to allow heavy construction lorries to turn, Artur – clad in a hard hat and luminous jacket – says he is “very surprised”.

“The Chinese probably work cheaply,” he says.

Social fears

The Chinese Overseas Engineering Group (Covec), has told the Polish authorities it will employ EU workers, but fears persist that it will ship in cheap labour from China to complete the job.

“Of course they can bring Chinese workers with them to help with the construction,” says Andrzej Maciejewski of the Polish Roads Agency (GDDKIA) that awarded the contract.

But “first of all, they will hire the workers from our market,” he adds.

He also says that Covec will have to obey Polish and EU employment laws, and comply with working hours and minimum wage regulations.

It’s a good challenge for Europe to have lower-cost workers

Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz - Mayor of Warsaw

But nevertheless the fear that the Chinese company will practice wage dumping is very real.

Andrew Kureth, editor of the Warsaw Business Journal, has watched Chinese firms in action in Poland.

“The Chinese companies are bringing in their own workers from abroad,” he says.

He cites a Chinese company building an apartment block next to his home using only Asian workers.

“If that continues to happen I think there is a possibility there will be a social outcry here.”

With many Polish builders working in the UK and perceived by some to be undercutting UK pay rates, it is ironic that their jobs at home could now be filled by Chinese workers.

A spokesman for the the European Investment Bank, which is lending much of the money, said that for the bid to be legal, proper procurement procedures would have been followed.

‘Chinese effect’

There are also indications that the Polish authorities are using Chinese bidders to drive down costs.

When Warsaw felt the bids for its new underground train line were too high, it got the Chinese to bid.

The Chinese did not win that time, but their competitors slashed their prices drastically in response.

It has been called the “Chinese effect”, says Michael Dembinski of the British-Polish Chamber of Commerce.

Polish officials say local workers must be hired first

“We need to look at the scale of this,” he says.

“If the Chinese bring over tens of thousands of labourers there will be unease about this.”

“If it’s a question of a couple of hundred skilled engineers, that’s not going to be too much of an issue.”

The mayor of Warsaw, Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz, formerly Vice President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, says the company will probably employ a mixture of Chinese and local workers.

“It’s a good challenge for Europe to have lower-cost workers,” she says.

Asked to comment on the fact that a government committed to free market principles has awarded a contract to a Chinese state-owned company, she is unapologetic.

“Countries in the West should reform their economies,” she says.

A spokesman for the European Internal Market Commissioner said they were not investigating the contract and there was “insufficient information to see if it was within the rules or not”.

This might be the first motorway contract for the Chinese in the EU but it is unlikely to be the last.

But with tension mounting in the UK, in particular, over the employment of foreign contract labour, the authorities in Warsaw and Brussels will need to tread very carefully.

via BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | China’s controversial Polish contract .

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Peugeot to offer in-car Wi-Fi in 2010 • Register Hardware

Peugeot is to turn its cars into mobile Wi-Fi hotspots.

Early next year, the French carmaker will offer an optional in-car wireless router that uses a HSDPA 3G modem as a backhaul.

Dubbed WiFi On Board, the box will allow the user to connect using whichever carrier he or she prefers.

At this stage, it’s not clear to what extent the unit is built into the fabric of the car. Certainly, the bundled modem is connected by USB, though whether into a slot in the dash or a standalone mobile Wi-Fi router powered through the ciggie lighter isn’t known.

Either way, Peugeot promised the unit will allow passengers to surf the internet and play online games while travelling. So the kids’ll be too busy networking their Nintendo DSes to pester you about whether you’re all there yet.

Peugeot hasn’t yet said how much the device will cost, though it did say that the accessory will initially only be offered as an adjunct to the 5008. Other vehicles will get it added to their optional extras lists in due course. ®

via Peugeot to offer in-car Wi-Fi in 2010 • Register Hardware.

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