DocumentCode
1335281
Title
Automotive electronics power up
Author
Kassakian, John G. ; Miller, John M. ; Traub, Norman
Author_Institution
MIT, MA, USA
Volume
37
Issue
5
fYear
2000
fDate
5/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
34
Lastpage
39
Abstract
People are spending increasing amounts of time in their cars. As a result, automakers are equipping vehicles with more and more power-draining creature comforts as selling points. Cup holders have given way to navigational systems, separate driver and passenger climate controls, and surround sound and compact disk players. But performance and handling improvements under the hood, such as dynamic stability controls, electronic suspensions, and precision-controlled fuel injection, also need power from the 14-V system featured in today´s cars. To handle the situation, automotive manufacturers and suppliers are embracing a 42-V standard for system voltage as they design new products. The challenge for designers, however, is that the cost of the new electronics cannot prohibit the economic production of automobiles. This hurdle must be cleared before cars with 42-V systems will become available to consumers. The paper discusses why 42 Volts was chosen, how many batteries will be needed, control systems, start/stop operation, and the influence of silicon devices on cost
Keywords
automotive electronics; 42 V; automotive electronics; batteries; climate controls; compact disk players; dynamic stability controls; electronic suspensions; electronics cost; navigational systems; precision-controlled fuel injection; silicon devices; start/stop operation; surround sound; Automotive electronics; CD recording; Control systems; Costs; Driver circuits; Fuels; Navigation; Stability; Suspensions; Vehicle dynamics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/6.842132
Filename
842132
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