Ford, SunPower team up for solar-charged electric vehicle

GreenTech Media

fordFord introduces “the first plug-in hybrid that doesn’t need to plug in.”

 

 

 

 

A couple months ago, we asked if electric vehicle services could help an automaker like Ford disrupt the relationship between electric utilities and their customers.

The answer, according to Mike Tinskey, director of Ford’s global electrification division, was probably not. Although Ford is encroaching on traditional utility business by providing new residential energy management services around its C-MAX Energi plug-in hybrid, Tinskey sees the automaker as a “conduit” rather than a direct competitor to power companies.

Unless, of course, Ford bypasses the utility altogether. And that’s exactly what the company now plans to do.

Today, Ford announced its vision to build out new charging infrastructure for its plug-in hybrid vehicles based exclusively on off-grid solar. If rolled out as planned, the automaker says it could cut grid charging of its C-MAX hybrid by up to 75 percent.

“This gives you the ability to fuel the vehicle without having to plug into the grid,” said Ford’s Tinskey in an interview. “We’ve been calling it the first plug-in hybrid that doesn’t need to plug in.”

The system blends together concentrating solar photovoltaics and autonomous driving technology to create an off-grid charging service for Ford customers.

Ford’s new concept plug-in hybrid model, called the C-MAX Solar Energi, will host an array of SunPower’s X21 high-efficiency solar cells on the top. The cells on their own wouldn’t provide enough electricity to recharge the car’s battery in a timely fashion, however. So Ford turned to researchers at Georgia Tech, who developed an acrylic Fresnel lens integrated into a canopy structure that will concentrate the sun onto the cells.

In Ford’s vision, a driver would park the car under the canopy at work or in a public space. Sensors along the car would engage autonomous driving, moving the vehicle beneath the canopy to track the sun. Tinskey said that a six-hour charge could provide 21 miles of solar-based driving.

“The infrastructure is nothing more than Fresnel lenses mounted in a canopy. There’s no motorized complexity. So we’re hopeful this can take off,” said Tinskey.

“Hopeful” is the key word here. The C-MAX Solar Energi is simply a concept model — which means it could take a while for the vehicle to hit commercial production.

Getting into the vehicle-charging sector is certainly not a sure bet, either. Given the number of recent flops and rollout problems among companies trying to build electric vehicle charging networks, it may seem surprising that an automaker like Ford would enthusiastically embrace the charging market. But this model will be easier to implement, said Tinskey.

“There’s been a lot of complexity in grid-based EV charging,” said Tinskey. “The cost and logistics to get Level 2 chargers installed can be tough. But this particular solution is freestanding and requires no grid connectivity.”

Ford’s new C-MAX model featuring SunPower cells will be shown at next week’s Consumer Electronics Show. The company will also display the new charging canopy and autonomous driving capabilities that help charge the car faster.

With 85,000 hybrids, plug-in hybrids and all-electric sold in 2013, Ford is pursuing new technology partnerships that will encourage more customers to go electric. One year ago, it unveiled the MyEnergi Lifestyle software platform, which connects smart appliances, solar PV and information about electricity rates to help homeowners optimize when and how to charge their vehicle. That product is still in pilot phase as well.

Tinskey said that “technology convergence” is making it possible for Ford and other automakers to dream up entirely new service models for electric vehicles. This solar-powered hybrid is the latest example of the coming trend.

“We’re excited about that trend. The technologies are converging to make this a reality,” said Tinskey.

 

Source: GreenTech Media. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

4 responses to “Ford, SunPower team up for solar-charged electric vehicle”

  1. MoreBikesPlease Avatar
    MoreBikesPlease

    Nice concept. In reality, that fresnel lens carport isn’t going to happen. Much more likely to put normal solar panels on your carport. Or on your house roof, and use them for your house too.

    I’d go for a car with a decent size battery, not the Cmax hybrid with only 8 kWh.

  2. Miles Harding Avatar
    Miles Harding

    More silliness. First, it was Volvo with their hair net solar charger, now this.
    It would be a whole lot easier to cover the roof in solar panels and call it a solar carport and it avoids having to park the car on its side in higher latitudes.

    Perhaps these sort of daft proposals are why the car companies also pursue the “Hydrogen Economy” with such gusto.

    The solar carport is a good idea. In Australia, an average carport could have 2kW of panels on it and produce 10-15 kwh per day, sufficient to drive an EV 80 to 100km.

  3. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    Regardless, I like these boffins to experiment a little bit. The important point appears to be that Ford have dipped their big toe with the Energi. I wish them all success with it, especially here where car production lines are currently being freed up.

  4. John Mckinley Avatar

    I would have to talk to my family if this fits in the budget. But I do like the new model.
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