The
media are full of news about electric cars.
The $100,000 Tesla electric sports car is going to be sold soon,
automakers are falling over each other to announce new electric vehicles, and
entrepreneurs across the world are jockeying for venture capital.
Petroleum
prices have jumped during the last year and everybody is feeling the pain at
the pump. Not a single soul is concerned
about filling up the batteries of his next electric car with electricity. After all, you just plug the car into the
next receptacle and there seem to be no appreciable costs.
Joe
owns a Corvette, a high performance car manufactured by General Motors, which
according to the car manufacturer drives 25 miles per gallon.
Joe’s
monthly commute is 1000 miles, he drives very carefully, and actually achieves
25 MPG on his daily trip going to work and running errands. At $4.00 per gallon at the pump he is paying
$160 for gasoline every month.
Joe is
thinking buying the Tesla, an electric sports car. He tried to find the cost of electricity for
driving this car. He could not find any
data anywhere. Joe knows that he must explain
to his wife why he needs to save energy and money before buying the Tesla, a
new, very fast electric sports car.
The
Tesla will accelerate faster than his Corvette.
There is no doubt that an electric vehicle can have a faster
acceleration than a gasoline car.
Electric motors and liquid fuel engines are just two different devices
converting electric energy or petroleum fuel energy into mechanical
energy. Electric motors can generate
much higher torque at the wheels at much lower turning speeds.
In
comparison, electric motors will have several shortcomings, too. They certainly will emit more pollutants and
more carbon dioxide as long as coal is used for producing electric power. Overall energy efficiency of the electric car,
from power plant to the road, is still worse than that of a modern automobile propelled
by an advanced combustion engine.
The
biggest drawback of electric cars is the small number of miles they can drive
after a complete recharge. Additionally,
the charging of an empty electric battery will take forever, high performance
batteries are expensive, and will only have a limited life expectancy.
What
about energy costs for driving an electric car compared to a gasoline powered
car? Both vehicles will have to store
energy. The electric car stores electric
energy in its battery, the combustion engine powered car stores energy in the
form of gasoline or diesel fuel in its fuel tank.
Now
let us take a comparative look at the cost of storing and paying for enough electric
energy or liquid fuel energy to drive 100 miles. Let us assume that both cars will have the
same power requirements to drive 100 miles.
In this respect the matchup between Tesla and Corvette is perfect. But how do we compare prices at the gas
station with utility costs at the receptacle?
Energy
contained in gasoline can be converted into mechanical energy only at the
limited energy conversion efficiency of a typical heat engine. The Corvette engine will have an energy
conversion efficiency of about 35%.
(Fuel fired engines may eventually reach 50% peak energy conversion
efficiency after decades of future advancements). Conversion efficiency of electric power from
the receptacle into stored energy first and into mechanical energy later is
much higher at about 85%.
The
energy content of gasoline is 131 MJ/gallon (megajoule per gallon). For driving 100 miles the Corvette will burn four
gallons of gasoline or 524 MJ/100 miles.
Only 35% of the energy in gasoline or 183 MJ will be used to propel the
Corvette. This is the mechanical energy
transmitted to the rear wheels of the Corvette.
Virtually the same amount of energy must be transferred to the wheels of
the electric car, the Tesla. Both cars
are very similar in size and driving characteristics.
However,
the Tesla has to take a little more energy from the receptacle because the
charging, storing, and discharging of electricity in the battery experiences
energy losses. These losses are about
15% of the electric energy taken from the receptacle and will not be available
at the wheels. The Tesla owner will,
therefore, pay1.15 times as much to get the same energy to the wheels as the
Corvette or 211 MJ per 100 miles. Electric
energy is priced in the form of dollar per kilowatt hour or $/kWh. The average price of electricity in the US is
$0.09/kWh. The factor for converting
energy measured in MJ to energy measured in kWh is 0.2778 kWh/MJ.
To
drive 100 miles, the Tesla will consume 58.6 kWh of electricity at a cost of
$5.28. The Corvette will consume 4
gallons of gasoline at a cost of $16. Now
we know that the Tesla will save about $10 per 100 miles or $10,000 over
100,000 miles.
The
Tesla will cost $100,000. The Corvette
is priced from $50,000 to $75,000. Guess
who gets the square deal with the roar of the engine as a free bonus.