CAR and Driver - March 2017

(Tina Sui) #1
illustrations by CHRIS PHILPOT

60 – U.S. electric grid alternating current
148 – Ferrari F12tdf crankshaft rotation at redline
200 – Hummingbird wingbeat
1000 – Sensing frequency for magnetorheological dampers
3667 – Infiniti V-6 turbocharger peak rotation
7667 – Dental drill peak rotation

Hz so good
The frequency at which certain objects switch, spin, sense,
and search, in Hertz, or cycles per second:

Power inverter and
motor controller

SICK SIC IS SLICK

Silicon-


carbide


power


inverters
Increasingly, electricity is
the race fuel of the future.
Formula E recently saw an
influx of automaker cash, money that’s
being used to develop more-efficient
electric-drive systems, just as in
electric road-car research.
Battery-pack voltage is climbing in
Formula E, from around 670 cur-
rently to at least 800 by 2018, and
turning the direct-current (DC)
flow from the battery into the
three-phase alternating
current (AC) required by the
motor takes power inverters
that can handle a lot of juice
without getting hot, as
heat creates power-
sapping resistance.
These solid-state,
high-speed switching
mechanisms—basi-
cally semiconductors
that have two termi-
nals in from the battery
and three terminals out
to the motor—have to
switch up to 40,000
times per second to keep
up with the demands of
Formula E’s furious drive
motors. Use of silicon carbide in power inverters is
the breakthrough. Formed at temperatures about
3000 degrees Fahrenheit, SiC semiconductors only
0.2 inch thick can handle hundreds of amps in a
power inverter with 95 percent efficiency. The
downside is cost; one Formula E team said its last
chipset cost $18,000, so it may be a while before we
see this technology in street electrics.

SOME (NEW) BATTERIES
REQUIRED


FORMUL A E’S


NEXT-GEN BATTERY
Supplier McLaren Applied
Technologies, an offshoot
of the road- and racing-car
business, is mum on the
details of the changes to
the cells and the cooling
strategy, which is vital to
holding down the pack’s
temperature and making
the batteries last. Any-
thing above a mere
144 degrees Fahrenheit
would cook the current
batteries. But it’s known
that capacity will roughly
double in McLaren’s new
packs to 54 kWh, and it’s
certain that voltage will go
up to somewhere between
800 and 1000 volts.
Higher voltage means
lower amperage for the
same power, allowing for
thinner, lighter wiring and,
with an optimized cooling
system, less heat, which
allows heavier-duty cycles
with faster recharging.
Higher voltages create
an upward spiral of
benefits that the automo-
tive industry wants to
jump on for production
electric vehicles.


40,000 – Silicon-carbide power
inverter switching
63,000 – Google searches

Racing’s
offspring:


  • Formula 1’s carbon-
    carbon brake tech
    descended to produc-
    tion cars as carbon-
    ceramic brakes on
    mega-exotics such as
    the Ferrari Enzo in



  1. Carbon-ceramics
    are now a common
    option on performance
    cars, from the Chevy
    Corvette to the BMW
    M3/M4.



  • Ferrari introduced
    paddle shifting to F1 in
    1989, and by 1997 a
    street version was in
    production with the
    Ferrari 355 F1. Since
    then, single-clutch
    automated gearboxes
    have given way to
    smoother and quicker
    dual-clutch transmis-
    sions, and nearly every
    car, from the Bentley
    Continental to the
    Honda Civic hatch, has
    sprouted shift paddles.

  • Modern F1 steering
    wheels are renowned
    for cramming together
    knobs and buttons.
    Such driver-changeable
    modes have migrated to
    road cars, with systems
    such as GM’s Perform-
    ance Traction Manage-
    ment giving Corvette
    drivers, for example, a
    wide range of stability,
    traction, and suspen-
    sion modes to choose
    from. We can also thank
    racing for the develop-
    ment of launch
    control—even though
    it’s outwardly banned in
    most series nowadays.

  • Computer airflow
    simulation combined
    with actual wind-tunnel
    work is what gives some
    racers the edge in
    tightly regulated series.
    All this intense aerody-
    namic development in
    recent years has paid
    automakers real
    dividends, especially
    those trying to cut drag
    or induce downforce in
    high-performance
    models. Many produc-
    tion cars, such as the
    Acura NSX, have
    sprouted flying but-
    tresses or grown
    under-car air tunnels.

  • Carbon fiber became
    the standard material
    for F1 tubs in the
    mid-1980s and eventu-
    ally filtered down. Its
    appeal to the wider auto
    industry has been
    obvious: high strength
    and low weight. Now
    that billions have been
    spent on its develop-
    ment, we see ever wider
    deployment, both as
    nonwoven molded
    composites for struc-
    tural and closure panels
    and as woven parts for
    roof panels and other
    exterior pieces.


Battery Pack

Power module
MOSFET
(metal-oxide-
semiconductor
field-effect
transistor),
one of the
controller’s
three solid-
state switching
devices


  1. FE ATURE. CAR AND DRIVER. MAR/2017


Semiconductor
made from
silicon-carbide
wafer
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