https://www.engineering.com/ElectronicsDesign/ElectronicsDesignArticles/ArticleID/16640/Can-This-Controller-Boost-EV-Range-by-30-Percent.aspx
Can This Controller Boost EV Range by 30 Percent?
March 14, 2018  Michael Alba

[images  
https://res.cloudinary.com/engineering-com/image/upload/w_640,h_640,c_limit,q_auto,f_auto/image001_jhwcdg.jpg
Silicon Mobility’s Field Programmable Control Unit (FPCU), the OLEA T222.
(Image courtesy of Silicon Mobility.)

https://res.cloudinary.com/engineering-com/image/upload/w_640,h_640,c_limit,q_auto,f_auto/image002_yclwap.jpg
Diagram of the OLEA T222 FPCU. (Image courtesy of Silicon Mobility.)
]

Silicon Mobility, a provider of control solutions for the automotive
industry, recently released a product that promises drastic performance
improvements for electric vehicles (EV) and hybrid vehicles. The company
developed a novel semiconductor architecture, a Field Programmable Control
Unit (FPCU), which it claims can extend EV range by over 30 percent on the
same battery.

The FPCU integrates a standard ARM Cortex-R5F processor with Silicon
Mobility’s AMEC subsystem. The latter consists of a key component, the
flexible logic unit (FLU) that handles real-time actuator and sensor
control. The FLU is what puts the field programmable in FPCU as its
flash-based programming allows it to be fully or partially reprogrammed in
the field. The FPCU also incorporates a SILant functional safety
architecture, classified as Automotive Safety Integrity Level D(ASIL-D),
which corresponds to the highest safety requirements in an automotive
product.

Silicon Mobility’s first FPCU is the OLEA T222, which is available for
application development but has not yet been qualified for the automotive
market. David Fresneau, Silicon Mobility vice president of marketing and
business development, said the qualification will be finalized by the end of
the month, with volume production of the OLEA T222 set for the beginning of
next year.
        
The OLEA T222 comes with a design framework and software library for
original equipment manufacturers(OEMs) to implement inverter control, DC-DC
control and more. The software and hardware code for the FPCU can be
generated using MATLAB and Simulink.

How will the FPCU help boost EV range so drastically? To put it simply,
Silicon Mobility claims that OEMs have been using inadequate
microcontrollers, originally developed for internal combustion engine
control, in their hybrid and EV applications. By designing its FPCU
specifically for automotive powertrain control, Silicon Mobility believes a
software bottleneck has been removed. It claims a 40x acceleration on data
processing as opposed to a reference automotive microcontroller, as well as
a whopping 180x reduction in power consumption. Put together, they claim
this can lead to a 32 percent increase in hybrid and EV range.

“We are completely committed to electrification,” Fresneau said.

If the FPCU lives up to its promise, it has the potential to help pull a big
thorn from the EV industry’s side: battery range. This has become one of the
key metrics by which any EV is judged, and its prominence in the eyes of
potential EV consumers has even been given a name: range anxiety.

The ability to boost range by 30 percent simply by swapping one controller
for another would be a no-brainer for EV manufacturers and could do a lot to
accelerate consumer EV adoption.Silicon Mobility’s commitment to
electrification seems evident, although it remains to be seen if its FPCU
can follow through on this commitment.

To learn more about the OLEA T222, visit Silicon Mobility’s website [
https://www.silicon-mobility.com/products/olea-t222/
] ... [© engineering.com]


+
http://www.thedrive.com/tech/19371/your-power-company-wants-congress-to-keep-the-ev-tax-credit
Your Power Company Wants Congress to Keep the EV Tax Credit
March 18, 2018 ... The program ... is set to expire once a manufacturer
reaches 200,000 units ... 36 public utility companies reached out to express
the need to not only keep, but extend the tax credit to all manufacturers
building electric cars ...
https://timedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2017/04/20170421-ev_tax_credits.jpg




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