 
     With an increasing need to use electric vehicles in city centres to reduce pollution, David Crawford looks at various solutions to power delivery.
     
The UN’s September 2014 Climate Summit has added fresh momentum to the drive to increase urban electric vehicle (EV) takeup. It has launched the Urban Electric Mobility Initiative, which wants to see EVs accounting for 30% of all urban travel by 2030, and make cities worldwide more friendly to their use. 
     
Encouragingly, the plan is being well supported by commercial companies. Joan Clos, executive director of UN-Habitat, the agency’s better urban futures programme, says: “Mobilising support from the private sector is vital to enable us to implement technological breakthroughs in urban mobility.” 
     
Industry forecasts for EV sales by 2020 range between 5% and 10% of global production, which is expected to reach 100 million units a year by 2021. So anything up to 10 million EVs a year will be coming on to the world’s roads and will require secure and convenient access to charging.
     
Static ‘plug-in’ EV charging continues to roll out across the world (although only Estonia currently has a national network); with service and parking areas and the driveways and garages of private homes finding roles as top-up locations. But range anxiety (drivers fearing that they will run out of power between charging points) continues to prove a major deterrent to wider EV take-up and has opened up the debate on alternative ways of sourcing power.
     
The most readily-available prospect is via the roadway that the vehicles are using, suitably modified to carry and transfer energy from national grids. To quote Stan Albrecht, president of the US’ Utah State University (USU), which is playing a central role in dynamic EV charging research in North America: “Every prior attempt to electrify the car has assumed the vehicle would be the energy carrier. By comparison, the grid is much more efficient at moving energy.” 
Hence the growing interest in  dynamic charging of vehicles on the  move, using onboard inductive units  to pick up a charge from power  sources buried in the road or located  above the surface. Dr Ralf  Effenberger, executive director of German  system developer Intis,  stresses the importance of dynamic charging in  “allowing EVs to become  as flexible as their internal combustion engine  counterparts”. 
     
The  Asia/Pacific region has taken an early lead in deployment.
     
  In 2013, the  [South] Korea Advanced Institute of Science and  Technology (
     
KAIST   research identifies five main drivers behind the move. Two are   technical: relating to batteries (weight, price, capacity) and charging   (duration, frequency, efficiency). Three are socio-economic –  continuing  depletion of oil resources, growing environmental pollution,  and the  emergence of tougher emissions regulations. The first two need  solutions  to maximise EVs’ contributions to meeting the other three. 
 
     
Meanwhile,    the university’s Faculty of Engineering continues to work on the    challenge of what Professor Grant Covic calls “creating a low-cost,    rugged, roadway-based primary system.” It has built a laboratory-scale    dynamic highway for technology testing.
  
Europe
At the same time, the university’s commercialisation arm UniServices maintains an ongoing R&D relationship to support Wireless Electric Vehicle Charging in both applications. Qualcomm also has its own R&D centre in Auckland, from where it hopes that work on dynamic charging can feed into projects such as the European €9 million (US$12.5 million) FABRIC project.Co-funded by the European Commission (EC), FeAsiBility analysis and development of on-Road charging solutions for future electric vehICles is carrying out trials at three test sites. A French ITS research centre at Satory, near Versailles, is focussing on the issue of vehicles moving into and overtaking out of charging lanes. An existing Italian wireless technology test track near Turin, developed to simulate urban driving conditions and currently configured for static EV charging, is being upgraded for dynamic tests. Both are focussing on system interoperability.
In  Sweden, the 
     
The   charging lanes are intended to be open to all traffic and the strips   would be built in sections, with only one at a time being live as the   vehicle passes, so ensuring safety for other road users. Its design   incorporates leeway to allow for the truck not being driven precisely   over the strips at all times. 
Technical work began in 2011 and in summer 2012, Volvo built a 400m-long track at its testing facility in Hällered outside Gothenburg. “We are currently testing how best to connect the electricity from the road to the truck,” says Richard Sebestyen, project manager at the Volvo Group Trucks Technology research and development division.
The project, which runs from January 2014 to December 2017, is engaging closely with the automotive industry, according to Denis Naberezhnykh, senior ITS consultant to project partner TRL. “Vehicle manufacturers are seriously considering the use of on-road charging solutions to overcome barriers to electromobility,” he told ITS International. His confidence is supported by the close involvement as partners, not only of Volvo, but also of Swedish truck and bus manufacturer Scania and Italy’s Centro Richerche Fiat.
FABRIC’s aim is to identify the costs and benefits calculations needed to source the investments required for widespread implementation.
In Belgium, the 2010-2013 Continuous Electric Drive project, run by the Flemish Drive automotive research centre, segregated a 500m stretch of a lane on the Belgian N769 national highway as a temporary test track with both asphalt and concrete surfaces.
It concluded that dynamic charging was highly feasible from the perspectives of both road construction and system design – the latter performing comparably with static charging.
Following    the trials, the lane reopened to general traffic for assessment of  any   impacts on durability (such as deformation) with satisfactory  results.  A  poll of 1,200 Flemish motorists showed higher levels of  interest in   dynamic charging than in wireless static or plug-in forms.
     
Intis    is operating a test track at Lathen, Lower Saxony, on the site of a    former maglev (magnetic levitation) R&D centre, where it has so far    demonstrated wireless power transfer to a moving car, bus and van.  The   track is designed to accommodate a range of charging options.  
     
Richard    Gould from its business development department, told ITS   International:  “we are now examining our options for commercialisation   going forward.”  The system won the energy and infrastructure category   of the Bavarian  state prize for e-mobility at the August 2014 at the   eCarTec (electric  car technology) trade fair in Munich, Germany. 
     
On   15 October 2014, the 
     
Among   other  participating cities, Cagliari (Italy), Glasgow (UK); London   (UK),  Münster (Germany), Plzen (Czech Republic) and Stockholm (Sweden)   will  all trial opportunity charging.
     
Co-funded    by the EC Directorate-General for Mobility and Transport with a  budget   of €22.5 million (US$27.9 million), the project aims to  demonstrate   solutions for a range of urban bus networks. 
 
In   the UK, the 
     
The       chosen site is likely to be a motorway with a high night-time   volume    of  commercial traffic. Criteria for system adoption include a   life    cycle  comparable to that of asphalt (typically around 16   years);     cost-effective maintenance; resistance to vibration and   weather; and     efficient charge collection at high speeds.
     
The       initiative forms part of a new focus on road users as customers by     the   Agency which is due by April 2015 to mutate from its present     status as   an executive agency of a government department to becoming  a      Government-owned company. It regards providing dynamic charging  as a      business service to a new generation of drivers.
   
America
This December the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) will hear a presentation from the highly-ambitious US/European Tracked Electric Vehicle (TEV) project. This is working towards a new type of infrastructure, based on a dedicated electrically-powered track on which it claims both standard electric and hybrid cars will be able to travel at high speeds, using contact strips in the road surface to access power.The presentation will contribute to a USDOT Federal Highways Administration (FHWA) workshop forming part of its Exploratory Advanced Research Program, which is researching longer-term - and higher-risk - breakthrough initiatives with the potential for “transformational improvements”. Programme manager David Kuehn lists “new propulsion technology, fuelling sources and infrastructure” as key elements.
Comments    
     
The      prefabricated track would use modular components which, says Jones      Carrick, would cost less to build than a three-lane US interstate      highway or its equivalent “and yet have three or four times more      carrying capacity”. It could use existing motorway lanes or sections of      disused railways and be financed by automatically collected tolls.
     
The    trial of 
     
Meanwhile,     Utah  State University is building what Professor Regan Zane, of its      Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, claims will be the      country’s first orthodox dynamic charging test track. The new oval      roadway will follow on from a successful 2013 project, which initially      developed a static system, and test ways of making EVs   cost-effective.    Conceived in collaboration with USU spinoff WAVE   (Wireless Advance    Vehicle Electrification), the track is designed to   handle EVs ranging in    size from a passenger car up to a full-size   bus.
     
Zane    sees the   project, if successful, having major impacts on pollution,    emissions   and vehicle operation costs. “If we wrap this up at the    interest   levels we are anticipating, we think the concepts could be    pretty   well proven within 10 years,” he says.
     
At      the same time, the US Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National      Laboratory is involved in a 2012-2015 research programme on the scope      for integrating high-power wireless charging into production EVs      currently on sale.  The third year is earmarked for demonstrating the      capability for dynamic charging.
     
A      central issue for road operators across the world is the extent of    the   road surface affected, approximately 10% according to modelling  by    North  Carolina State University or between 5% and 15% in KAIST’s     experience. 
     
Opportunistic charging, of course, reduces or (with overhead pantograph contact) eliminates the issue altogether.   
 
     
         
         
        



