Tim Holton, Jaguar Land Rover - Internet of Business

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Roughly 90 percent of the personal vehicles on the road daily could be replaced by a .... Jaguar Land Rover. W/1/26 Abbey Road, Whitley. Coventry CV3 4LF ...
BEVs for ICEV drivers The development of requirements for Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) to satisfy current driving behaviours in premium internal combustion engine vehicles (ICEVs) Tim Holton Advanced Propulsion Group, Jaguar Land Rover

What kind of BEV would an ICEV driver buy?

1. Understanding the customer Systems engineering perspectives

2. ICEV data source Jaguar Land Rover lease fleet data

3. Driving distances (BEV range) Trip chains & driver adjustments

4. Parking times (BEV refuelling) Intervening parks

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1. Understanding the customer i. Background research

Source: Mckinsey 2017

Roughly 90 percent of the personal vehicles on the road daily could be replaced by a low-cost electric vehicle available on the market today, even if the cars can only charge overnight

Whilst 87% travelled under 40 miles/day, the desired average minimum range of a BEV was 215 miles. 3

1. Understanding the customer iii. Vehicle requirements are derived from customer requirements

Customer Needs

Vehicle

Systems & Components

Functional Validation

Requirements Definition

Conceptual Design

Detailed Design

Vehicle Testing

Component Testing

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1. Understanding the customer iii. Vehicle requirements are derived from customer requirements

Customer Needs

Vehicle

Systems & Components

Travelling Behaviour

Driving distance

Parking locations

Range capability (miles)

Parking duration

Refuelling time (minutes)

Battery size (kWh) Battery C-rate

Charging power(kW)

Willingness to adapt

Refuelling energy (miles)

Interoperability

Vehicle efficiency (wh/mile) 5

2. ICEV data source InControl data from Jaguar Land Rover lease vehicles ‘InControl’ sample dataset for existing drivers:–

800 vehicles, 450000 trips



Total distance: 6.4 million miles



Total duration: 360 vehicle years



Mean daily distance: 48 miles −

(range of 20 to 50 miles quoted in the literature)

How can we use this data to derive BEV requirements? 6

3. Driving distances and BEV range i. Trip Chains A ‘trip chain’ is a sequence of trips bounded by a ‘terminus park’.

The terminus park may be defined by:•

an ‘anchor’ location (‘Home’, ‘Work’ , ‘Anywhere’) and/or



a ‘threshold’ park duration (e.g. ‘Overnight’ or ‘>8 hours’)

Home

Shop

Terminus parks represent routine charging events Trip chain Terminus park

School

Terminus park Intervening parks

Intervening parks represent opportunity charging events Work

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3. Driving distances and BEV range i. Trip chains applied to a 25000 mile p.a. driver with 37 mile commute

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3. Driving distances and BEV range i. Trip chains applied to a 25000 mile p.a. driver with 37 mile commute >1hr terminus park

Trip chain >8hr terminus park Driver 1 - 240 mile usable range BEV Trip chain

- satisfies ~90% of home overnight trip chains - ‘adjustments’ for the remaining 10%

More convenient routine charging leads to longer trip chains

Overnight at home

Overnight away from home

Overnight at home

Trip chain 9

3. Driving distances and BEV range i. Trip chains applied to two 25000 mile p.a. drivers with 37 mile commute

Driver 1

Driver 2

- 240 mile usable range BEV

- 120 mile usable range BEV

- satisfies ~90% of home overnight trip chains

- satisfies ~90% of home overnight trip chains

- ‘adjustments’ for the remaining 10%

- ‘adjustments’ for the remaining 10%

BEV suitability depends on occasional usage, not average usage

How do we avoid, or help with, the ‘adjustments’ in red? 10

3. Driving distances and BEV range i. Trip chains applied to two 25000 mile p.a. drivers with 37 mile commute

Daily travel distances were only weakly related to lower range satisfaction (not significant)…The regularity/predictability of users' mobility patterns, the percentage of journeys not coverable because of range issues, and users’ individual comfortable range accounted for variance in range satisfaction.

Is it possible to relate ‘Driving distance’ and ‘% Adjustments’ to a population of users? 11

3. Driving distances and BEV range ii. Driver adjustments

Adjustments Ideal Journey and Parking behaviour

Ability to swap transport

Flexible Travel plans

Willingness to charge en route

Real World Range Target Real World Charge Rate

‘Adjustment’ is what allows a current ICE driver to accommodate BEV limitations

Premium customers will always desire to minimise the level of adjustment required 12

Usable BEV Range

Number of days/year customer will ‘Adjust’

‘n’ customers driving distance data

% Customers accepting BEV

3. Driving distances and BEV range iii. Relating Driving distance and Adjustments to a population

24 days public charge

Premium customers 6 day public charge

Usable BEV Range

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BMW i3 Nissan Leaf

Tesla

3. Driving distances and BEV range iii. Relating Driving distance and Adjustments to a population

Median = 6 Median = 40 Median = 15

Comparison of ICE trip chain analysis and Tesla real world behaviour Real world Tesla data shows a similar trend to the ICEV trip chain analysis. Tesla drivers are using superchargers more often than trip chain analysis predicts. This could be for a number of reasons:1. US based sample rather than UK 2. Free supercharger use incentivising opportunity charging events 3. Sample size 4. Early adopters may have more acceptance of public charging 5. Vehicle not being fully charged overnight

200 miles usable range Median adjustments = 15

Tesla Model S ~200 miles usable range Median adjustments = 25

Supercharger events per year

4. BEV Adaption – Refuelling (Opportunity charging) i. Trip chain Intervening parks charging requirements Trip chain

Terminus park

Trip 1 > 90 mins

Trip 2 Terminus park

Stop < 1 hour

Required range increase during intervening park: 10 miles/min charging would mean:

Distance of Trip 2 (miles) Stop time (min)



73% of stop times are long enough to charge for Trip 2

20 miles/min charging would mean: •

92% of stop times are long enough to charge for Trip 2

The Freedom of motoring

“…the car has been such a success over the past century thanks to its unparalleled flexibility. Having the freedom to go where you like, when you like and with a minimum of inconvenience is something the public simply don’t want to give up.”

Neil Winn, Autocar

THANK YOU

Tim Holton Electrification IDL, Warwick University CV4 7AL

Jaguar Land Rover W/1/26 Abbey Road, Whitley Coventry CV3 4LF, UK jaguarlandrover.com

M +44(0)7881 234 105 [email protected]

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