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Can Plug-In Hybrid
Electric Vehicles (PHEV) Power A Grid?
February 22, 2010
Think of it as the end
of cars' slacker days: No more sitting idle for hours in parking lots or
garages racking up payments, but instead earning their keep by helping
store power for the electricity grid.
"Cars sit most of the time," said Jeff Stein, a mechanical engineering
professor at the University of Michigan. "What if it could work for you
while it sits there? If you could use a car for something more than just
getting to work or going on a family vacation, it would be a whole
different way to think about a vehicle, and a whole different way to
think about the power grid, too."
Stein leads a National Science Foundation-funded team exploring plug-in
hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) that not only use grid electricity to
meet their power needs, but also the car’s potential to store
electricity from the wind or sun, or even feed electricity back into the
grid, earning money for the owner.
The concept is called vehicle-to-grid (V2G) integration. Stein is
participating in the symposium “Toward Green Mobility: Integrating
Electric Drive Vehicles and Smart Grid Technology” 8:30 a.m. PT. Feb.
19, at the American Association for the Advancement of Society Annual
Meeting here.
The session will discuss the effort to embrace large-scale changes that
are needed to improve the sustainability and resilience of the
transportation and electric power infrastructures. That heralds a new
era in which vehicles and electric “fuel” infrastructure become a
system.
“The vehicles we have now provide freedom and meet the needs of
individuals,” Stein said. “PHEVs and electric vehicles can be a
completely different way of using a car, to be something that is defined
as being a part of the greater good in concert with others. It has
fascinating possibilities.”
Stein and his colleagues envision a world where the electric cars become
“distributed” storage, doubling as mobile holding tanks for electricity,
ready to serve in their down time.
"If we had lots of PHEVs all plugged into the grid, then what seems like
an insignificant amount of energy storage becomes a large energy
storage," he said.
Stein’s team already has made some progress understanding battery health
and life – a significant issue in a vehicle that depends on large,
expensive batteries and the charging and discharging that will be asked
of them.
“We’re exploring how an owner can charge it and utilize the battery in a
way that is battery health conscience to extend the useful life of the
battery,” Stein said. “That’s especially important if we also think
about charging vehicles at off-peak hours, and it’s also important if
we’re talking about this shared opportunity for electric storage. What’s
good for the battery isn’t necessarily good for the grid.”
Other issues they’re working on include:
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Designing
new generations of PHEV powertrains, grid systems and intelligent
controllers for these powertrains and systems to maximize the
benefit of V2G integration.
- Understanding the impacts of PHEVs – no
small task since the supply chains for an automobile contain some
20,000 parts and components – the grid and transportation
infrastructures. For example, the research team is looking at
life-cycle assessment, that is, understanding how energy is
distributed through a V2G system throughout its life, what kind of
demands PHEV will place on the electric grid, what needs the grid
will have and what impact on the grid’s carbon footprint and
emissions. Building computer models to help understand and predict
market penetration of PHEVs is part of the input needed by the
life-cycle assessment models.
- Developing models to understand how PHEVs
can influence the reliability and stability of the electrical grid.
The team looks at issues both of resilience and redundancy—how well
a system can shift to a back up plan. The models they create
ultimately can be turned over to industry.
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