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J1634 SAE BEV Test Procedures

2010 DOE Hydrogen Program and Vehicle Technologies


Annual Merit Review
June 09, 2010
Michael Duoba
Argonne National Laboratory

Sponsored by Lee Slezak

Project ID # VSS027

This presentation does not contain any proprietary, confidential, or otherwise restricted information
Overview
Timeline Barriers
 Start: March 2009  Barriers addressed
 End: Calendar year 2010? – Address codes and standards needed to
enable wide-spread adoption of
 50% Complete electric-drive transportation
technologies.

Budget Partners
 $0 in FY09
 ANL staff is Co-Chair of J1634
 $150k in FY10
 Task Force includes experts from
 (not possible without EPA, Toyota, Honda, Ford,
Benchmarking program at Chrysler, GM, Nissan, JARI,
ANL) Mitsubishi, CARB, Tesla, BMW

2
Relevance: Industry and Regulatory Agencies Will
Use This Updated BEV Test Procedure
 Vehicle economy / range is defined according to test procedures
 Over-burdensome procedures worked for low volume, one-off EVs
 In 2008, it became clear that production EVs will be in large-scale production
 OEMs knew immediately that the current J1634 is not suitable for >100mi EVs
 Vehicle development process requires repeated tests according to procedures
 Relevance: Mass produced BEVs will use the J1634 Task Force methods!

EPA, CARB,
OEM Development
R&D

Certification/
Define Build TEST Production
Labeling
Vehicle Prototypes (J1634) Run (J1634)

Validate
10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min

10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min

10 min
10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min

10 min
10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min

10 min
10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min
Problem Statement: Current J1634

10 min
10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min
250mi = 17+ hours of testing, no interruptions allowed

10 min
“Death by Urban”

10 min 10 min 10 min 10 min


Approach: Co-Chair J1634, Use Concepts
Developed in J1711
 Jeff Glodich (Ford) and Mike Duoba co-chair new J1634 task force
 Objective:
– Develop new, shorter test methods that accomplish the same objectives as existing
J1634 procedure
– Try to solve known weaknesses of “long-form” J1634 test
 Approach:

Compile Test J1634 Participants Analyze Results,


Gather Ideas and
Options to Try Methods and Make Procedure
Methods
Investigate Report Adjustments

Validate Final Describe


“Short-Cut” Procedure in SAE Ballot
Method Standard J1634
Approach: J1634 Short-Cut Methods

 Test Product: Find AC Wh/mi and total range for any given cycle
 Constraint: Short-cut must provide repeatable results consistent with the long
J1634 method
 Short-Cut Method in General:
1. Find in-situ battery capacity (an on-dyno test)
2. Run a representative number of cycles from a full charge
3. Charge back to full, recording AC Wh
4. Process data to predict range from consumption rate and capacity
 The above generic approach requires several variables be tested to achieve best
accuracy while maintaining manageable total test time.
 ANL tools and vehicles
– EV-optimized 2WD dyno facility
– OEM BEVs from AVTA program and private owners
– ANL-built “TTR” prototype PHEV platform run in EV mode
– Battery HIL testing isolating battery to validate repeatability, response of battery,
charger, and BMS
Technical Accomplishments: ANL Defined The
Following Test Methodology Concepts

Committee Looking at the Following Test Components


 On-Dyno Battery Capacity Test: Extrapolation based upon dyno test, not from
standard battery test data
– 55 MPH steady-state speed, in 50min segments with 10 min rests.
– Accel and decel specifications defined
 “Short Cut”: Run each required cycle 4 times, recharge after
– AC recharge energy used for consumption result
– Range is extrapolated using one of several methods still under consideration
 “Super Short Cut”: Run BEV like a conventional vehicle
– Run UDDS, HWY, US06, etc as if it were a conventional vehicle, then recharge
– Use J1711-developed method of assigning AC charger energy based upon DC used in
each cycle
Accomplishments: Used Battery HIL to Test Initial
Viability of Short Cut Concepts
 Virtual: Vehicle, powertrain, cycle driving
 Real hardware: Battery, charger, BMS
 Model of vehicle ensured consistent
behavior during test options, focusing on
battery response Results Summary

 Conclusions
– Short-cut methods provide similar and
repeatable results
– Short-cut range determination is in fact
more repeatable than long methods
because variability in end-of-range power
limits during transient cycles
End of Range UDDS
Accomplishments: ANL Testing of OEM Vehicles

 Magna Focus BEV


– Predating short-cut development
– More experience conducting J1634
 BMW Mini E
– Vehicle owned by BMW
– Testing performed at BMWs California facility,
using ANL instrumentation and test plan
– Differences in methods were small but
noticeable
– Natural test-to-test variability of vehicle made it
difficult to find procedure-based biases
 Tesla
– Private owner donated Roaster Sport for one
month of testing
– Very repeatable results
– Interesting finds related to intermittent thermal
management
– Still processing data…
Accomplishments: Use ANL Vehicle Platform Tools,
“Through-the-road” (TTR) PHEV

 PHEV configured to run in pure EV


mode
 Vehicle highly downsized in order to
boost actual range
 Experimented to find on-dyno
capacity test protocol
 Results of range estimation were
encouraging
11000 70
 Helped quantify important 10000
60
consumption characteristics
9000

Vehicle Speed (mph)


8000 50

Cumulative W-hr
differentiating warmed-up results 7000
6000 40

versus initial drive cycles 5000


4000
30

3000 Full Depletion 20


2000 4x Runs V1 10
1000 4x Runs V2
0 0
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000

Total Time (s)


Collaborations: Standards Development Are
Collaborative By Nature. Consensus Must Be Built

 Ran Mini E with ANL instrumentation hardware at BMW facilities in Oxnard, CA


 Working with Tesla to make dyno test successful (spare parts, traction control
assistance)
 Mitsubishi contributed data to committee
 Magna brought early Focus BEV prototype for early ANL testing experience
 Committee participants:
Future Work: New J1634 Test Concept and Still
Under Development

 Need more data to have confidence in new methods


 Range estimation methods are very repeatable and
comparable to existing long J1634 methods
– Still need to find best approach
 Short-cut has higher consumption due to warm-up
conditions during short-cut
 “Super Short-Cut” eliminated this problem, but has
another limitation in intermittent thermal
management
 More development needed!
Future Work: Development, Analysis, Validation

 More test data required to validate new procedure concepts


– Several BEVs planned in AVTA test program
 Current concepts may need adjustments, development
 Complete analysis of various short-cut methods on Tesla results
 Investigate applicability of “super short-cut” method and its compatibility
with unpredictable A/C usage invoked by battery thermal management
 Try method on “old” Lead-Acid BEV technology (must work for all BEVs,
even old ones)
 More complete and appropriate description of required instrumentation
specifications (accuracy, drift, resolution…)
BEV Test Procedure (J1634) Project Summary

 Objective: Find test procedure methods that are practical for today’s
>100mi range battery electric vehicles
 Relevance: Direction of J1634 will likely be used throughout industry and
government agencies tasked with quantifying BEV performance on an
dynamometer
 Accomplishments:
– Using experience from ANL’s successful benchmarking program, many key
features of the new test concepts were ANL contributions
– Mini E, Tesla, TTR, Battery HIL, and Magna Focus EV prototype testing in
support of validating new ideas about test concepts
 Progress: Procedures are being honed through testing varied BEV designs,
expectations are to finish by end of calendar year
 In Conclusion: Many contributions of committee members make this
program a truly group effort to providing a solution the critically relevant
need of a suitable test procedure for the next generation of electric
vehicles

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