Half the electric vehicle market value lies in larger road vehicles, notably cars, and here the legal restrictions are weaker or non-existent, and range anxiety compels most people to buy hybrids if they go electric at all. Over eight million hybrid cars will be made in 2025, each with a range extender, the additional power source that distinguishes them from pure electric cars. Add to that significant money spent on the same devices in buses, military vehicles, boats and so on and a major new market emerges. Whereas today's range extenders usually consist of little more than off- the- shelf internal combustion engines, these are rapidly being replaced by second- generation range extenders consisting of piston engines designed from scratch for fairly constant load. However, a more radical departure is the third- generation micro turbines and fuel cells that work at constant load. The report compares them and forecasts the lower power needed over the years given assistance from fast charging and energy harvesting innovations. The report profiles key developers, manufactures and integrators, with ten-year forecasts of the different types of electric vehicle and of range extenders by number, unit value and market value. Market drivers and the changing requirements for power output are also analyzed.
Author: Peter Harrop
Publisher: IDTechEx Ltd.
Specs: Published by IDTechEx Ltd. with a Product Code of MR-ID-020 and 149 pages.
Related Topics:
Electric vehicles
Military vehicles and equipment
Hybrid electric vehicles
Fuel cells
Marine vehicles and equipment
Buses
Combustion and combustion processes
Pistons
SAE MOBILUS
Subscribers can view annotate, and download all of SAE's content.
Learn More »