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Electric Vehicle Thermal Management

This example models the thermal management system of a battery electric vehicle. The system consists of two coolant loops, a refrigeration loop, and a cabin HVAC loop. The thermal load are the batteries, powertrain, and cabin.

The two coolant loops can be joined together in serial mode or kept separate in parallel mode using the 4-way valve. In cold weather, the coolant loops are in serial mode so that heat from the motor warms the batteries. If necessary, a heater can provide additional heat. In warm weather, the coolant loops remain in serial mode and both the batteries and the powertrain are cooled by the radiator. In hot weather, the coolant loop switches to parallel mode and separates. One loop cools the powertrain using the radiator. The other cools the batteries using the chiller in the refrigeration loop.

The refrigeration loop consists of a compressor, a condenser, a liquid receiver, two expansion valves, a chiller, and an evaporator. The chiller is used to cool the coolant in hot weather when the radiator alone is insufficient. The evaporator is used to cool the vehicle cabin when air conditioning is turned on. The compressor is controlled such that the condenser can dissipate the heat absorbed by either or both the chiller and the evaporator.

The HVAC loop consists of a blower, an evaporator, a PTC heater, and the vehicle cabin. The PTC heater provides heating in cold weather; the evaporator provides air conditioning in hot weather. The blower is controlled to maintain the specified cabin temperature setpoint.

This model has three scenarios set up. The drive cycle scenario simulates driving conditions in 30 degC weather with air conditioning on. The vehicle speed is based on the NEDC followed by 30 min of high speed to push the battery heat load. The cool down scenario simulates a stationary vehicle in 40 degC weather with air conditioning on. Finally, the cold weather scenario simulates driving conditions in -10 degC weather, which requires the battery heater and PTC heater to warm up the batteries and cabin, respectively.

Model

Scenario Subsystem

This subsystem sets up the environment conditions and inputs to the system for the selected scenario. The battery current demand and powertrain heat load are a function of the vehicle speed based on tabulated data.

Controls Subsystem

This subsystem consists of all of the controllers for the pumps, compressor, fan, blower, and valves in the thermal management system.

Parallel-Serial Mode Valve Subsystem

The 4-way valve in this subsystem controls whether the coolant loop operates in parallel or serial mode. When ports A and D are connected and ports C and B are connected, it is in parallel mode. The two coolant loops are separated with their own coolant tanks and pumps.

When ports A and B are connected and ports C and D are connected, it is in serial mode. The two coolant loops are merged and the two pumps are synchronized to provide the same flow rate.

Motor Pump Subsystem

This pump drives the coolant loop that cools the charger, motor, and inverter.

Charger Subsystem

This subsystem models a coolant jacket around the charger, which is represented by a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass.

Motor Subsystem

This subsystem models a coolant jacket around the motor, which is represented by a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass.

Inverter Subsystem

This subsystem models a coolant jacket around the inverter, which is represented by a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass.

Radiator Subsystem

The radiator is a rectangular tube-and-fin type heat exchanger that dissipates coolant heat to the air. The air flow is driven by the vehicle speed and the fan located behind the condenser.

Radiator Bypass Valve Subsystem

In cold weather, the radiator is bypassed so that heat from the powertrain can be used to warm up the batteries. This is controlled by the 3-way valve that either sends coolant to the radiator or bypasses the radiator.

Battery Pump Subsystem

This pump drives the coolant loop that cools the batteries and the DC-DC converter.

Chiller Subsystem

The chiller is assumed to be a shell-and-tube type heat exchanger that lets the refrigerant absorb heat from the coolant.

Chiller Bypass Valve Subsystem

The chiller operates in an on-off manner depending on the battery temperature. This is controlled by the 3-way valve that either sends coolant to the chiller or bypasses the chiller.

Heater Subsystem

The battery heater is modeled as a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass. It is turned on in cold weather to bring the battery temperature above 5 degC.

DCDC Subsystem

This subsystem models a coolant jacket around the DC-DC converter, which is represented by a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass.

Battery Subsystem

The batteries are modeled as four separate packs surrounded by a coolant jacket. The battery packs generate voltage and heat based on the current demand. The coolant is assumed to flow in narrow channels around the battery packs.

Pack 1 Subsystem

Each battery pack is modeled as a stack of lithium-ion cells coupled with a thermal model. Heat is generated based on the power losses in the cells.

Compressor Subsystem

The compressor drives the flow in the refrigerant loop. It is controlled to maintain a pressure of 0.3 MPa in the chiller and the evaporator, which corresponds to a saturation temperature of around 1 degC.

Condenser Subsystem

The condenser is a rectangular tube-and-fin type heat exchanger that dissipates refrigerant heat to the air. The air flow is driven by the vehicle speed and the fan. The liquid receiver provides storage for the refrigerant and permits only subcooled liquid to flow into the expansion valves.

Chiller Expansion Valve Subsystem

This expansion valve meters refrigerant flow to the chiller to maintain a nominal superheat.

Evaporator Expansion Valve Subsystem

This expansion valve meters refrigerant flow to the evaporator to maintain a nominal superheat.

Evaporator Subsystem

The evaporator is a rectangular tube-and-fin type heat exchanger that lets the refrigerant absorb heat from the air. It also dehumidifies the air when the air is humid.

Blower Subsystem

The blower drives the air flow in the HVAC loop. It is controlled to maintain the cabin temperature setpoint. The source of air can come from the environment or from recirculated cabin air.

Recirculation Flap Subsystem

The recirculation flap is modeled as two restrictions operating in the opposite manner to let either environment air or cabin air to the blower.

PTC Subsystem

The PTC heater is modeled as a heat flow rate source and a thermal mass. It is turned on in cold weather to provide heating to the vehicle cabin.

Cabin Subsystem

The vehicle cabin is modeled as a large volume of moist air. Each occupant in the vehicle is a source of heat, moisture, and CO2.

Cabin Heat Transfer Subsystem

This subsystem models the thermal resistances between the cabin interior and the external environment.

Simulation Results from Scopes

The following scope shows the vehicle speed, heat dissipation, cabin temperature, component temperatures, and control commands for the drive cycle scenario. At the beginning, the coolant loop is in serial mode. After about 1100 s, it switches to parallel mode and the chiller is used to keep the batteries below 35 degC.

Simulation Results from Simscape Logging

This plot shows the power consumed by the thermal management system to cool the vehicle components and cabin. The largest power consumption occurs in the refrigerant compressor when the chiller is used to cool the batteries.

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