ELECTRIC KART BATTERY WITH E-PAPER SAFETY STATUS DISPLAY
20230241978 · 2023-08-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02J7/0063
ELECTRICITY
B60L3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L58/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L3/0046
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L58/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L50/60
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02J7/0048
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/48
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H02J7/007
ELECTRICITY
H01M2220/20
ELECTRICITY
B60K35/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01M10/488
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B60L3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02J7/00
ELECTRICITY
B60L58/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L58/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60K35/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A safety status display system for an electric vehicle high-voltage (HV) battery is presented. The system contains a battery management module coupled to the HV battery to acquire status information and configured to disconnect the HV battery in the event of a faulty battery condition or a detected electrical insulation defect. An insulation monitoring module installed between the HV battery and the electric vehicle and configured to detect an electrical insulation defect between the HV battery and the frame portion as well as communicate the detected electrical insulation defect to the battery management module. An e-paper display unit coupled to the battery management module to receive the HV battery status information and configured to render a bistable display of the HV battery status information a detected faulty battery condition or electrical insulation defect.
Claims
1. A safety status display system for a high-voltage (HV) battery used in an electric vehicle, comprising: a battery management module electrically and communicatively coupled to the HV battery and configured to acquire status information of the HV battery, the battery management module further configured to disconnect the HV battery in the event of a faulty battery condition or a detected electrical insulation defect; an insulation monitoring module installed between the HV battery and a frame portion of the electric vehicle, the insulation monitoring module electrically and communicatively coupled to the battery management module and configured to detect an electrical insulation defect between the HV battery and the frame portion, the insulation monitoring module further configured to communicate the detected electrical insulation defect to the battery management module; an e-paper display unit comprising an electronic label-type structure that is affixed to the HV battery, the e-paper display unit electrically and communicatively coupled to the battery management module to receive the HV battery status information and configured to render a bistable display of the HV battery status information, wherein, in the event of a detected faulty battery condition or an electrical insulation defect detected by the insulation monitoring module in which the HV battery is disconnected by the battery management module, the e-paper display unit maintains the display of a most current HV battery status information including an indication of a detected faulty battery condition or electrical insulation defect.
2. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the e-paper display unit maintains the display of the most current HV battery status information and the indication of a detected faulty battery condition or electrical insulation defect, until the HV battery is reconnected.
3. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the e-paper display unit displaying of a detected faulty battery condition or electrical insulation defect is differentiated from the display of HV battery status information by being displayed in different contrast colors, different background colors, different message text colors, and/or warning identifiers.
4. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the e-paper display unit is electrically and communicatively coupled to the battery management module via a serial peripheral interface to receive display instructions.
5. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, further comprising: the battery management module being electrically and communicatively coupled to a voltage control unit, the voltage control unit configured to control the connectivity of the HV battery by communicating with at least one power contactor unit connected to conductors of the HV battery and operative to switch between open and closed states; wherein, in the event of a detected faulty battery condition or electrical insulation defect, the battery management module communicates a disconnect command signal to the voltage control unit and the voltage control unit correspondingly transmits a signal to the at least one power contactor unit to switch to an open state.
6. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the battery management module is configurable to operate in active mode to function and respond in real-time and in dormant mode to conserve battery power by being active only at specified intervals, wherein, during the dormant mode specified intervals, the battery management module performs the HV battery status information acquisition and forwards the acquired status information to the e-paper display unit.
7. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the HV battery status information acquired by the battery management module comprises state-of-charge, state-of-health, state-of-function, battery temperature, battery capacity, and/or number of charge duty cycles.
8. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the insulation monitoring module determines the existence of an electrical insulation defect if a detected resistance to battery output voltage ratio value is below 100 Ω/V.
9. The HV battery safety status display system of claim 1, wherein the HV battery voltage output is nominally in a range of 300-400 VDC and the insulation monitoring module determines an electrical insulation defect if a resistance is detected in a range of 30-40 kΩ or less.
10. An electric vehicle comprising: an electric motor; a high-voltage (HV) battery configured to supply power to the electric motor; and the HV battery safety status display system of claim 1.
11. The electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein the electric vehicle comprises an electric kart.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] The drawings included herewith are for illustrating various implementations of articles, products, methods, and apparatuses described in the present specification. The drawings could not be to scale. Some features shown in the drawings could be exaggerated, or scaled down, relative to their possible “life” size(s), in order to make these features clearly visible in the drawings.
[0012] In the drawings:
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] The present technology will be described herein with respect to an electric kart. It is contemplated that at least some aspects of the present technology could be used in other small electric vehicles such as, electric bicycles, for example.
[0019]
[0020] As depicted, electric kart 100 includes a frame 102 comprising, at least in part, a tubular structure, also known as a frame 102. The frame 102 is made from a plurality of hollow cylindrical steel members and steel brackets that are welded to each other. It is contemplated that at least some of the hollow cylindrical members could be replaced by other types of members such as, for example, solid cylindrical members, hollow tubes having a cross-section other than circular, and beams, etc.
[0021] It is also contemplated that the members and brackets could be made of another type of metal, such as, for example, aluminum and that at least some of the members and/or brackets could be made of a non-metallic material, such as, for example, composite materials or plastics. It is further contemplated that at least some of the members and brackets could be joined to each other by means other than welding, such as, for example by fastening and bonding and that two or more of the members and brackets described below could be cast or otherwise formed as a single component.
[0022] As shown in
[0023] Disposed in a rear portion 114 of the frame 102, rearward of the driver seat 108, is a drive assembly 116 for driving the electric kart 100. The drive assembly 116 includes an electric motor 116a that is positioned rearward of the driver seat 108. In one implementation, electric motor 116a comprises an AC permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM). Accordingly, electric kart 100 includes a power inverter 132, electrically coupled between the battery packs 122, 124 and electric motor 116a, to convert the VDC values provided by the battery packs 122, 124 into VAC values required by the AC PMSM electric motor 116a. It is contemplated that electric motor 116a could also be embodied as a DC motor, in which no power inverter would be required to provide the necessary VDC power supply to the DC motor. It is contemplated that in some embodiments, the power inverter 132 could be disposed in front of the driver’s seat 108.
[0024] A rear-wheel drive shaft 118 extends through and is supported by the drive assembly 116. A pair of rear wheels 120 is operatively connected to the frame 102 and is driven by the rear-wheel drive shaft 118. The electric motor 116a is operatively connected to the rear-wheel drive shaft 118 to drive the rear wheels 120. It is contemplated that the electric kart 100 could include a twin-motor drive system having two drive assemblies 116 behind and on either side of the driver’s seat 108. In such an implementation, two rear-wheel drive shafts 118 would be installed on both sides of the electric kart 100, in the two drive assemblies 116.
[0025] In the implementation depicted by
[0026] The BMS 164 operates to balance the voltage of the battery cells 146, control recharging of the battery cells 146, control the operating temperature of the battery cells 146, and shut off (i.e., disconnect) the connectivity between the battery cells 146 and electric kart 100 in case of detected faulty battery conditions, such as, for example, overloading, overheating, accelerated degradation, thermal runaway, etc. In addition, BMS 164 operates to collect battery status information, such as, for example, state-of-charge (SOC), state-of-health (SOH), state-of-function (SOF), battery temperature, battery capacity, number of charge duty cycles, etc. The BMS 164 forwards the battery status information to a display panel (not shown) disposed in the cockpit area to facilitate driver viewing. The BMS 164 is capable of operating in “active mode”, which enables it to function and respond in real-time, or in “dormant mode”, which enables it to conserve battery power and “wakes up” at specified intervals to perform status checks and report the same to a display.
[0027] Turning to
[0028] The cells 146 of each of the electric kart battery packs 122, 124 are configured to be rechargeable Li-ion batteries and are electrically interconnected in a combination of parallel and series electrical connections to provide battery packs 122, 124 with an output voltage of nominally 300-400 VDC. It is contemplated that the battery cells could manifest any other suitable battery type, such as, for example, gel cell battery, nickel-metal hydride battery, etc. capable of providing the necessary voltage and amperage as well as also be electrically interconnected in any suitable manner to provide a different output voltage/amperage to suit the operational requirements of electric motor 116a.
[0029] Given this overview of electric kart 100 and electric kart battery packs 122, 124, attention is drawn to
[0030] As discussed above, BMS 164 is electrically and communicatively coupled to electric kart battery packs 122, 124 to execute various HV battery maintenance procedures (e.g., voltage balancing, recharging control, temperature control, etc.) as well as disconnect the HV battery supply connectivity in case of detected faulty battery conditions (e.g., overloading, overheating, accelerated degradation, thermal runaway, etc.). In addition, BMS 164 is configured to collect and furnish HV battery status information, such as, SOC, SOH, SOF, etc. to a cockpit display (not shown) for convenient viewing. In some embodiments, the cockpit display is a steering wheel-mounted display.
[0031] As also noted above, for safety reasons, an electric kart 100 utilizing HV batteries is required to incorporate IMD 202 configured to detect insulation defects between the HV battery electrical system and the electric kart chassis 102 and electrically communicate the defective insulation condition to the BMS 164 for disconnection of battery packs 122, 124. In some jurisdictions, IMD 202 is also required to display the detection of an IMD defect for a certain amount of time (e.g., 15 min.).
[0032] The IMD 202 is typically installed between the HV conductors and the electric kart frame 102. Generally, in operation, the IMD 202 injects a small measuring current (on the order of .Math.As) between the HV conductors and the frame 102 to generate a measuring voltage and calculate a measuring resistance/voltage (Ω/V) ratio. If the resistance/voltage ratio fall below a threshold (e.g., 100 Ω/V), an insulation fault is determined to exist between the HV conductors and the frame 102. By way of example, for HV conductors outputting 300 VDC, a resistance of 30kΩ or less would indicate an insulation fault and for HV conductors outputting 400 VDC, a resistance of 40kQ or less would indicate an insulation fault. In such cases, the IMD 202 forwards a signal indicating the insulation fault condition information to the BMS 164. In turn, the BMS 164 forwards a command signal to power contactor units to disconnect the HV battery supply and provides the detected insulation fault condition information to e-paper display unit 204 for display.
[0033] Regarding the display of the detected defective insulation condition, as shown in
[0034] In various implementations, the e-paper display unit 204 is based on electrophoretic technologies. Generally, such technologies incorporate an array of microcapsules, typically 40 .Math.m in diameter, that are filled with a fluid containing microscopic particles of different colors and electrical charges that are sandwiched between electrode plates. Upon applying electric fields to the electrode plates, the colored/charged capsules move up or down depending on whether the electric field is positive or negative to provide the surface of the e-paper display to reflect a certain color. Based on signal data controlling the synchrony of applied charges, the reflected colored/charged capsules are capable of rendering text and images on the surface of the e-paper display. These e-paper display renderings are bi-stable meaning that no power is needed to maintain the rendered text/image on the e-paper display until subsequent electric fields are applied to actuate the colored/charged capsules to update/revise the renderings. It is contemplated that other e-paper technologies capable of maintaining bi-stable displays without power, such as gyricon, electrowetting, electro-fluidic, may also be implemented.
[0035] In a nonlimiting implementation, e-paper display unit 204 is embodied as flexible, thin, electronic “label-type” structure that may be conspicuously affixed to one or both of the HV battery packs 122, 124, shown in
[0036] Therefore, in the event of a detected defective insulation condition, in which the IMD 202 furnishes the BMS 164 with such information and the BMS 164 responds by instructing the disconnection HV battery packs 122, 124, the e-paper display unit 204 affixed to the HV battery packs 122, 124 is capable of maintaining, without any supplied power, the most recent HV system status information indefinitely.
[0037]
[0038] As noted above, the BMS 164 operates to collect HV battery status information and faulty insulation information for display as well as instruct disconnection of HV battery supply connectivity in the event of case of detected faulty battery conditions or detected faulty insulation conditions. Accordingly, BMS 164 is communicatively coupled to voltage control unit (VCU) 208 that operates to control the connectivity of the HV battery supply in response to BMS 164 command signals. That is, as depicted by
[0039] As depicted by
[0040] Accordingly, the disclosed electric kart battery control configuration improves upon conventional configurations by maintaining the conspicuous display of the latest HV battery status information and faulty insulation condition information in the absence of power and provide drivers, rescue responders, and service crews with adequate warning of potential hazardous conditions.
[0041] Moreover, in addition to the noted improvements over conventional electric vehicle battery control configurations, the disclosed electric kart battery control configuration provides additional benefits. That is, as noted above, BMS 164 is capable of operating in “active mode” or “dormant mode.” As such, when electric karts are stored away, for energy conservation reasons, the BMS 164 may be configured to operate in dormant mode with periodic “wake ups” at specified intervals (e.g., once per week) to perform status checks and report the results of the checks to the e-paper display unit 204 for conspicuous display.
[0042] It will be appreciated that modifications and improvements to the above-described implementations of the present technology may become apparent to those skilled in the art. The foregoing description is intended to be exemplary rather than limiting. The scope of the present technology is therefore intended to be limited solely by the scope of the appended claims.