 The 2011 Chevy Volt has handled crash testing well, with the passenger compartment, and the battery system both being sufficiently safeguarded. (Source: GM)
 Noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) have been a more significant challenge for GM, though. The company still isn't happy with the vehicle's NVH performance and is still making changes. (Source: GM)
 GM has tweaked the Volt's battery chemistry and is currently satisfied with it. Its now working to optimize the supporting system and its software to provide maximum battery life. The vehicle is overweight, so an optimized system is even more critical. (Source: GM)
GM's engineers are hard at work fixing the upcoming vehicle's flaws and improving the battery system
Chief Engineer Andrew Farah and Battery
Engineering Group Manager Bill Wallace recently gave members of the
press an update on the status
of the 2011 Chevy Volt and its battery pack. Designed with
the goal of providing a 40 mile range from a 16 kWh (8 kWh usable)
charge, the pack and its supporting systems have evolved greatly over
the past couple years.
Initially, GM was considering a
four-partner arrangement with LG Chem providing cells for CPI to
assemble into packs, and A123 Systems producing cells for Continental
(which owns the former Siemens VDO) to assemble into packs. The
arrangement was significantly altered when GM deemed A123 Systems not
ready for this generation, opting to go
solely with LG Chem. Subsequently GM also decided to handle
the battery pack assembly itself at a new assembly facility located
in Brownstown, Michigan.
Since GM arrived at these decisions,
it has been hard at work cooking up the Volt packs. The packs
it's currently producing are third generation packs -- the first
generation was for the Malibu-body mules, the second generation for
the Cruze-body mules, and the current generation for the
pre-production
(IVER) body Volts. Thus far, the Brownstown facility has
built 80 IVER Volts and 300 production battery packs.
When it
comes to the Volt battery, tweaking the system's software and
hardware to efficiently manage it is as important, or more so than
the design of the battery itself, and that's what GM is currently
focusing on. With the first product and process validation
vehicles (PPV) set to be produced at the Detroit-Hamtramck assembly
plant in March 2010, and with the manufacturing validation build
(MVB) landing between August and November of next year, GM has only a
small window to perfect the battery system.
Still, the results
thus far have been promising, with 300,000 miles logged in GM's Volt
full vehicle simulator (more than the life of many components of the
vehicle) and no major problems or failures reported thus far.
The batteries also completed a 65 percent calibration ride, recently,
with no "show-stopping" issues.
With over 50,000
cells produced since the first generation, Mr. Wallace offers the
impressive claim that not one failure (that he knows of) has
occurred, on the cell level, module level, or pack level
evaluations. With so many miles of simulated road testing and
charging cycles, GM and its partner LG Chem have gained some insight
and tweaked the battery chemistry slightly to provide better life
with similar performance. The result design is now finalized,
in terms of chemistry, according to Mr. Wallace.
The cells
have thus far endured torturous testing under extreme conditions.
One test called the crush and impact test looks at the response to a
collision, looking at whether the battery's seal is maintained.
A second test, looks at corrosion by smearing salt on the pack and
putting it in a heated chamber. Overcharge testing is also
being performed.
These battery-specific tests are in addition
to full-vehicle crash tests, rough road, and hot-cold testing.
Early indicates from the full vehicle tests look promising, with a 40
mph collision with a barrier at a 30 degree angle unable to intrude
upon the pack's area.
The pack weighs in at a final weight of
200 kg (440 lb) according to GM. The car as a whole, however,
has a problem unfortunately shared by many Americans -- it weighs
more than they would like. GM at this point has conceded that
it's probably too late to fully fix this by production time and hope
to negate its effects on performance and roll out reductions over the
vehicle's full production cycle.
One problem GM is looking to
tackle is improving cold weather performance. One strategy it
is employing is to pre-warm the car while its J1772 connector is
plugged in, to ready it for road use. The vehicle employs an
electric heater, as well as heated seats, which will sap the battery,
likely reducing the all-electric mileage in the winter.
Aside
from the cold, another major issue is noise, vibration and harshness
when running with the range extender (gasoline engine). To
minimize the noise GM's engineers have come up with new bushings such
as switching rubber for hydraulics for mounting the
engine/generator. The body's aerodynamics also produced
unpleasant noises, so venting has been implemented, as well.
This work is ongoing and not complete.
A couple Volt-related
questions still remain unanswered, though, in addition to the
vehicle's final weight. GM engineers still won't reveal the
size of the final gas tank for use with the range extending gasoline
engine. They also stop short of saying whether The Detroit
News report that GM had given
the Converj concept a production go-ahead was true. Mr.
Farrah did comment that it was a great concept and that he was
looking forward to getting to work on it, indicating that production
indeed may be in store, though no official word has come yet.
"My sex life is pretty good" -- Steve Jobs' random musings during the 2010 D8 conference
|
Most Popular ArticlesReport: Apple to Debut iPad 3 During First Week of March February 10, 2012, 9:36 AM Nikon Announces 36.3MP D800, D800E D-SLRs February 7, 2012, 10:11 AM Google's Motorola Mobility Purchase Approval Expected Next Week February 9, 2012, 3:02 PM Quick Note: Acura Unveils Production Version of ILX Hybrid Sedan February 8, 2012, 9:10 AM Woman Ordered to Decrypt Laptop in Bank Fraud May Have "Forgotten" Password February 7, 2012, 12:36 PM
|