Vehicle To Grid - Seminar Reports|PPT|PDF|DOC|Presentation




                                       At the same time of consuming large amounts of oil resources, the exhaust emissions of vehicles have became one of the culprits of urban air pollution. The vehicle’s exhaust emissions have met or exceeded 60% of the total the amount urban emissions. With the energy and environmental pressures, developing electric vehicles and promoting transport energy transformation has become the important target of government in developed countries and China.


                                      
                                   Electric drive vehicles can be thought of as mobile, self-contained, and—in the aggregate—highly reliable power resources. “Electric-drive vehicles” (EDVs) include three types: battery electric vehicles, the increasingly popular hybrids, and fuel-cell vehicles running on gasoline, natural gas, or hydrogen. All these vehicles have within them power electronics which generate clean, 60 Hz AC power, at power levels from 10kW (for the Honda Insight) to 100kW (for GM’s EV1). When vehicle power is fed into the electric grid, we refer to it as “Vehicle-to-Grid” power, or V2G.                                       
                                       
                                       With the popularization of electric vehicles and the construction of charging stations, the understanding of people to the electric vehicle and the changing station is not only confined to the transportation and the "gas station". It is desired to exploit more extensive application. The concept of V2G was firstly brought out by Willet Kempton of the Delaware University. The initial goal of V2G was to provide peak power, that is, the electric vehicle owners charging the vehicles in low load with lower price and discharging the vehicles in peak load with higher price. Then, the vehicle owners can get the profits from the V2G project. The functions of the vehicle in power grid were expanded, and the conclusion was get that benefit of providing peak power is significantly less than providing auxiliary services to the power grid . The V2G research also was carried out in some other countries such as Denmark,  Britain and Germany, etc .

0 comments: