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Fast Vehicle Charging Goes by Many Names (With No Consensus on What It Really Means) By Pike Research Aug 17, 2010 - 1:26:39 PM
By John Gartner
Getting dozens of different plug-in vehicles to seamlessly connect and talk to dozens of various chargers is no easy feat. For several years now, a handful of national and global standards organizations, led by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE), have been developing standards for plugs and vehicle charging equipment. Despite these herculean efforts of those involved, there exists confusion about how to refer to the fastest rates for charging vehicles.
The agreed upon (as anointed by the SAE) standard charging rates are known as Level 1 and Level 2 and refer to alternating current (AC) charging equipment. (Equipment on the vehicle itself converts the AC to the DC used to actually charge the batteries). These slow and medium speed charge rates will be offered by nearly every piece of home or commercial charging equipment, from companies including Coulomb Technologies, ECOtality, Eaton, Better Place, AeroVironment, and others. These specific charge rates (1.44 kW and 6.7 kW respectively) will get most vehicles fully charged in as little as 2-5 hours.
Since there has been no specific global standard passed for this type of charging, EV charging equipment companies have been developing products at a number of charging speeds and have been referring to it in multiple ways. These include rapid charging, fast charging, Level 3 (or Level II!) charging, or simply "DC charging." In Japan, the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has created a version of DC charging equipment that has gotten support internationally by a group that wants to base a "ChadeMo" standard on it. Here in the U.S., TEPCO is also gaining some support, while other SAE members are holding back on any endorsement and could develop an alternate Level 3 standard.
The use of the term "Level 3" is contentious because Levels 1 and 2 are SAE standards and refer to AC charging equipment, and the SAE hasn't weighed in on a Level 3 standard for AC charging, while Level 3 DC charging has only been loosely described by industry folks as fitting within a range of voltage and amperage combinations. For example, AeroVironment has DC charging equipment products for three different rates (30, 50 and 60 kW), and compatibility with the CHAdeMO protocol is an option.
No Level 1 or 2 standards have been drafted by the SAE for DC chargers.
Some engineers (many of whom participate in standards groups) have been waging a battle lately to get charging equipment companies and the media to stop using the Level 3 terminology because there is no existing standard, and because companies that purchase equipment advertised as such today might believe that what they buy today would be compatible with other current or future DC charging equipment. I've had several conversations lately where this point was made loud and clear to me, yet at the Plug-In 2010 conference, several vendors continued to use Level 3 in their marketing materials and presentations.
I was hoping that by asking a panel of experts at a session on EV charging I'd get clarity, but got none. Mark Duvall of the Electric Power Research Institute said that work was still being done on a standard and would likely be done within a year. Gerry Kissel, of GM, who had stated in his presentation that there was no Level 3 standard (see slide here, retreated when confronted on the subject, and said that it was nonetheless okay for industry folks to continue using Level 3. To make matters even more confusing, there's debate going on whether a single plug can be developed for both AC and DC or charging, or if they should remain separate.
So the "Level 3" label seen today means proprietary DC charging hardware, and some kind of faster than medium speed, but gives no guarantee that it will make it possible to plug-in anywhere else. And if you use those words together in conversation or online, you may get a strong rebuke, or no reaction at all.
John Gartner is a senior analyst with Pike Research, a market research and consulting firm that provides in-depth assessment of global clean technology markets.
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