Tech Talk: how inductive charging will let you charge while driving | Autocar Professional

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Quite how long the switch from heat engines (burning fuel to generate mechanical energy) to something else will take to mature is anybody’s guess.

It’s likely to take a long time, and it’s probably fair to say that as far as battery-electric cars are concerned, what we see today is just the start of something, the proverbial tip of an iceberg or beginning of a journey down a very long road.

The arrival of the BEV has sparked an emotional response among drivers (both for and against) considering that it is, after all, just another technology that will ultimately succeed or fail on its own merits.

One of the things people get most vexed about is the uncertainty of whether or not they will be able to get a crucial charge when they expect to without fuss, delay or argument.

Inductive charging, also known as wireless charging, has been under development for as long as the modern generation of EVs has been around, but at this early stage of the BEV life cycle, it’s a long way off becoming mainstream.

It works like a now familiar wireless phone charger or the ignition coil that generates the sparks to ignite fuel in petrol engines. If a wire is passed through a magnetic field, an electrical current is generated in the wire at the moment it enters the field and again when it leaves.

With an electromagnet on the ground and coiled wire on the underside of the car, this principle allows charging to take place wirelessly.

Parking over a charging pad is one way of doing it, and another seemingly far-fetched method is the idea of having electromagnets embedded in the road so that as BEVs drive along, they can receive a charge.

Back in 2022, we looked at a project called Arena del Futuro, a 1050-metre test track in Italy designed to test “dynamic wireless power transfer” with BEVs on the move.

Recently, the company behind that tech, Electreon, installed a public charging roadway, claimed to be the first in the US, on a stretch of road in Detroit.

It has also won a tender to supply a similar system in a 2-kilometre section of the A10 highway near Paris as part of the first electric road system (ERS) in France.

The plan is to deploy ERS over almost 3,000 miles / 4,800 kilometres of French road by 2030 and more than 5,500 miles / 8,800 kilometres by 2035, the main aim being to decarbonise heavy trucks and buses.

Electreon also leads the Smart Road Gotland consortium, set up in 2019 to demonstrate ERS in Sweden. Similarly, the idea is to electrify 1,200 miles / 1,920 kilometres of Swedish road by 2030.

On a one-mile stretch of electrified road, a 40-tonne truck and trailer drove at 50mph / 80kph and wirelessly transferred 100kW of energy from the road.

It might be hard to imagine electrified roads today, but given how long it took for ICE technology and its supporting infrastructure to mature, maybe the idea isn’t as radical as it seems.

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