Keeping the Lola-Drayson concept car going is more impressive than its flat-out speed
HOW
do you get more power out of an electric car than its main battery pack
can deliver? Simple, turn the car's very bodywork into a battery,
extract power from every bounce of its suspension system and, while
you're at it, suck energy from the road surface too.
Such
are the measures being built into an electric racing car capable of
reaching 320 kilometres (200 miles) per hour by a UK-based consortium.
Their aim is to perfect a multitude of novel electric-vehicle (EV)
technologies and ultimately to transfer them to road cars. Led by Drayson Racing Technologies of Oxford and Lola Cars
of Huntingdon, the 10-firm consortium also includes aerospace
heavyweight BAE Systems in Warton, UK, and 3G-cellphone pioneer
Qualcomm of San Diego, California. They want to improve on the range of today's EVs, says consortium leader Paul Drayson, which are normally limited to around 160 kilometres (100 miles).
"Don't judge electric cars by what you are seeing on the street right now," he says.
The
first way they plan to improve range is to free the car's main battery
from ancillary tasks like headlights. Enter BAE Systems' closely
guarded "structural battery" technology
- which allows sections of carbon-fibre bodywork to supply power. "They
are made out of honeycombs of carbon fibre filled with a solution that
gives them the energy storage capacity of a battery," says Julian Sole,
chief designer at Lola Cars. "Their advantage is they can form any
shape."
The
structural battery is built into the rear of the car but there is no
limit to how many of the car's surfaces could become batteries.
The
next energy-scavenging trick comes from Multimatic of Rockingham, UK,
which has harnessed the up-and-down motion of the car's suspension to
generate electricity on the move. This charges a capacitor, whose
discharge can be used to propel the car or power movable aerodynamic
surfaces, which provide the super-slippery concept vehicle with
road-holding downforce. The system mirrors the way regenerative braking
in EVs and hybrids harvests deceleration energy rather than losing it
as heat.
Meanwhile, Qualcomm's London-based Halo Inductive Power Transfer division is addressing another major EV hurdle: charging the main battery.
HaloIPT has developed doormat-sized pads packed with copper coils
- one in the car, one in the road - that transfer power wirelessly to
the car through electromagnetic induction. A HaloIPT spokesman claims
that the system is 92 per cent efficient.
Drayson
wants to populate the racing line on racetracks with the pads, so cars
charge from the track during races. This kind of innovative charging
technology, designed to keep the concept car flying around the track,
will inevitably have wider applications. "The new generation of
technology we are showcasing in electric racing will amaze people when
it gets to road cars," he promises.
http://www.newscientist.com/
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