Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Stickers!

I am spending Christmas in Wyoming with family, so no work on the car lately. I have been debugging the BMS code, and designing a sticker for the car:
The equation is the differential form of Faraday's law, which is one of Maxwell's equations, which describes induction. If this seems like something that belongs on your electric car, I can send the full size image.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Battery charger and other stuff

It has been over a month since I last posted to this journal. I have been very busy at work, where we just launched our first product- a miniature XRD/XRF instrument for identifying minerals in the field. Even so, I have made some progress on the car, mostly buying parts and working on the next version of the BMS. I am now the proud owner of a PFC-20 battery charger from Manzanita Micro. This charger is nice because it can output the 408 volts that my pack will require. One drawback is that it is not isolated, which means that the negative side of the battery pack is connected to one leg of the mains. This should not be a safety issue, as all the other equipment I am using is fully isolated.

Oh yeah, I said next version of the BMS. Although I'm sure the voltage regulator style BMS that I already developed would perform just fine, I have gone ahead with the Eierlegende Wollmilchsau (literally, an egg-laying woolly milk pig-- a German expression that can better be translated as "Swiss army knife") version. This version has a small microcontroller (an Atmel ATtiny25) on each cell that monitors the cell voltage and communicates with a tiny linux computer over an optoisolated i2c bus. Each microcontroller can bypass current, either on its own or on command from the computer.

The advantage of this system is that it gives individual information on the state of each cell. Also, if a cell controller fails, the computer would immediately notice, and alert the driver that the pack needs service.

The other positive aspect is that each cell controller will cost less. Microcontrollers are truly amazing. For under a dollar, you can get a chip that is much more powerful than, say, the Tandy Color Computer 2 that was my first computer.