The Kynix Blog
Stay Ahead with Expert Electronics Insights,
Industry Trends, and Innovative Tips
- Electronic Components
- News Room
- General electronic semiconductor
- Components Guide
- Sort by
- Robots
- Transmitters
- Capacitors
- IC Chips
- PCBs
- Connectors
- Amplifiers
- Memory
- LED
- Diodes
- Transistors
- Battery
- Oscillators
- Resistors
- Transceiver
- RFID
- FPGA
- Mosfets
- Sensor
- Motors, Solenoids, Driver Boards/Modules
- Relays
- Optoelectronics
- Power
- Transformer
- Fuse
- Thyristor
- potentiometer
- Development Boards
- RF/IF
- Semiconductor Information
- PCB
- transistor
DescriptionIt's not weird to discover that applications are becoming more complex,with connectivity just one of the drivers. And,as it become more complex.the number of sensors grows,as does the need for more capable user interfaces. At the same time,algoriths need more processing power,wireless stacks mandate larger memories and power budgets are shrinking.In order to coping with the growing list of demands, a great number of leading MCU manufacturers have recently launched Micro Controller Unit built around the ARM Cortex-M4 core. BodyThe M3 is general purpse and the M0+is low cost but the M4 is a more capable core in general if look at the Cortex range. Oivind Loe,a senior strategic marketing manager with Sillicon Laboratories said. Microchip's product marketing manager--Anand Rangara commented:“Something that sat around without the need to communicate now needs connectivity. When that happens, you need more flash and RAM, as well as graphics capability and perhaps the ability to support a touch interface. All this has to be offered at good power/performance and an attractive price.” 'Industrial Strength' MCUsSilicon Labs has expanded its EFM32 Gecko portfolio with what it calls ‘industrial strength’ MCUs. It says the EFM32GG11 Giant Gecko MCU family offers the ‘most advanced’ feature set available in the low-power MCU market.Loe noted that MCU development isn’t just about power. “It’s also about executing tasks efficiently. A simple program with a few clocks will run efficiently on an M0+ core. But if the workload is larger, the M4 core has some special instructions that can allow it to use less energy than the M0+ and more efficiently than some larger cores – and that's crucial for a range of application.” GG11 Geckos offer up to 2Mbyte of flash and 512kbyte of RAM to accommodate more code and comms stacks, such as a 10/100 Ethernet MAC and a dual CAN interface. Looking to meet power budgets, the parts boast an active power consumption of 77μA/MHz, while drawing 1.6μA in deep sleep mode. FPU to Increase System EffiencyMicrochip’s SAM D5x/E5x MCUs also take advantage of the Cortex-M4’s floating point unit (FPU) to increase system efficiency. Running at up to 120MHz, the D5x and E5x MCUs come with up to 1Mbyte of dual-panel flash and up to 256kbyte of SRAM. Rangarajan noted: “We’ve listened to our customers, so we’ve included more connectivity in these MCUs. But it's not just about adding memory , it’s also about more performance and the ability to provide more flexible peripherals, interfaces and connectivity options.” Meanwhile,he pointed out that the original SAM D MCUs – developed by Atmel prior to its acquisition by Microchip – were based on the Cortex-M0+. “But we’ve always wanted to take the product line to the next level of performance. This allows Microchip to address a broader range of consumer and industrial automation applications.” Limited the Clock RateBucking the trend to a certain extent, both Silicon Labs and Microchip have limited the clock rate in their latest MCUs. Giant Geckos, for example, have a maximum clock of 72MHz. “These products are focused on energy efficiency,” Loe claimed. “If you build an MCU to run at 200MHz, for example, then each clock cycle will consume more energy than in an MCU running at 72MHz. A lot of MCUs will be used in battery powered apps, so we need to be energy efficient and to enable the CPU to sleep a lot.” Rangarajan agreed that clock rate is not always the primary factor when it comes to developing MCU portfolios. “We hear our customers saying don’t give me faster clock rates, make sure the MCUs meet my requirements. An app that runs from a battery requires a power efficient MCU. If you want a fast MCU, then you have to make trade offs.” In Loe’s views, MCU selection is all about the ability to perform certain tasks at a particular power efficiency. “That is always going to involve trade offs, but an M4 based MCU will generally be good for embedded applications with challenging energy consumption requirements.” Adopt the Concept of Smart PeripheralsBoth companies have adopted the concept of smart peripherals in their recent products. Loe explained: “Twenty years ago, most MCUs saw the CPU doing everything. That took a lot of CPU cycles, which meant you couldn’t do as much as you might have liked.“Today, most apps will take advantage of DMA, which offloads the CPU. In turn, this allows the CPU to do more.” Rangarajan said Microchip provides what he called ‘sleepwalking’ peripherals. “If there’s a requirement for them to do small numbers of transactions, this can be done without waking the CPU.” On the other hand,Sillicon Loe Noted that It’s all about when you have to wake up the M4 core. We’re trying to allow it to sleep for as much as possible. More than half of the peripherals in a Giant Gecko can run autonomously in deep sleep mode. Both Companies are Keen to Highlight Their Provision Silicon Labs has launched a starter kit to support Giant Gecko based application development(following picture) With this approach, a Giant Gecko’s A/D converter can operate while the CPU is in deep sleep mode. “It can sample and use DMA to pull the data into RAM,” Loe continued.Loe highlighted a couple of aspects. “We have included a cyrotimer that runs in shut off; the lowest energy mode. It’s a simple timer that’s useful when you need the CPU to be asleep for minutes. there’s the Peripheral Reflex System, which allows peripherals to talk. For example, the real time clock could tell the A/D converter to take a sample. It gives a level of determinism which you don’t get from a CPU. Microchip's Product brings better power efficiency How does an MCU developer differentiate their products from similar devices with an M4 core? Rangarajan pointed to the integration of a buck regulator. “This brings better power efficiency,” he claimed, “which means lower active power consumption; as little as 65µA/MHz. The parts also support flexible pin options.”“We’re offering the best integrated security features,” Rangarajan contended. “SAM Dx/Ex MCUs have crypto hardware acceleration – symmetrical and asymmetrical – and public key encryption, amongst other features. It’s something Microchip has taken to heart and has made sure it’s all in the MCU.“We’re offering the best integrated security features,” Rangarajan contended. “SAM Dx/Ex MCUs have crypto hardware acceleration – symmetrical and asymmetrical – and public key encryption, amongst other features. It’s something Microchip has taken to heart and has made sure it’s all in the MCU. EndLoe pointed to the security management unit (SMU) as an ‘upgrade’ to the memory protection unit (MPU) associated with the M4’s core. “While the MPU allows you to segment memory into eight regions, the SMU takes that further. The MPU is restricted to eight regions, so there is limited granularity. The SMU allows you to selectively say which pieces of code can access each peripheral.” “All of this is important,” Rangarajan concluded, “as security will become standard in the next few years.”
kynix On 2017-11-24
Summary As we all know,originally developed to support analogue computers,the op amp has an elegantly simple core design. The industries are contining to spare no effect in creating‘ideal op-amp'. Simply by wiring in different feedback configurations using passives,op amp can be massaged into roles that include buffers and integrators as well has high-gain amplifiers. It is little wonder the op amp has been as successful as it has been. What's more, people in the industry expect a few core parts to do almost any job and for the circuit to be ripe for integration cause the op amp is so readily tunerable.In practice,the choice of discrete op amps has never been wider. Steve Logan, executive business manager for Maxim Integrated’s core products groups, says: “If you don’t need terribly high bandwidth, high voltage for industrial systems or very low voltage for portable designs, those are times when op amps can be integrated.” Subtly different edge cases push designer to discrete options Op amps often interface electronics to the outside world, so they need to take account of numerous subtly different edge cases, which pushes designers to discrete options. Each variant uses a specific choice of process and circuit topology to take on a job. Logan cites the wrist-worn heart rate monitor, which measures the light reflected back from a green LED. In these systems, input current noise has a large effect on signal quality, calling for op amps that can deliver much lower levels than generic options. Signal-Conditioning of Systems Signal-conditioning of systems can turn out to be more complex than first appears. Logan says "“One application that’s not immediately obvious is driving a high-speed, high-resolution SAR A/D converter; it can be pretty demanding circuitry. The difference between a SAR and sigma-delta is in how it takes a big gulp of current. The op amp has to settle quickly, so you are talking settling time, slew rate and total harmonic distortion. You may need multiple stages to get the settling time, along with an input buffer, plus a gain stage and filter stage in front of that. You might think at first: how tough can it be? Then it turns into a two- or three-stage op-amp circuit.” Dwight Byrd, marketing manager at Texas Instruments, says: “As demand for further sensors and signals increases, better conditioning and amplification of the sensor becomes paramount, thus making the proliferation of op amps possible.” Art Eck, senior product marketing manager at Microchip Technology, adds: “We see a trend toward more designer op amps: op amps that are built for a particular application or set of applications.” At the same time,Kevin Tretter,the product marketing manager of Microchip notes that changes in application needs are creating new problems for op-amp components to address. “With the rapid expansion of wireless capabilities the industry has seen over the years, the presence of electromagnetic interference is becoming a larger issue. Sensitive analogue sensor circuits commonly sit next to wireless communication modules. More and more amplifier manufacturers are trying to combat the adverse effects by implementing on-chip filtering.” Demand for Futher Sensors A lot of designs call for sensors to be added but for boards to be shrunk cause increasing noise is partly a by-product of the shrinking size of many designs as well ass the recent focus on making systems more aware of their surrounding environment. Byrd notes: “Where the biggest driver in further technology trends comes in is package size. Previously, an SC-70 package was considered one of the smallest one-channel op amps available. Now, SOT553 is becoming commonplace.” Logan says the trend continues all the way to wafer-level packages, measuring just more than 1mm on the longer side. Such tiny packages support the idea of an ‘analogue insurance policy’, where op amps and similar parts provide additional conditioning and protection such as buffering to integrated mixed-signal SoCs. “For a little extra size and cost, you can add these functions and make them more robust. The wafer-level package lets you do that.” Renesas subsidiary Intersil Engineer Tom Kugelstadt said there is otential for circuit-level advances that could reduce the need for op-amp proliferation and so aid integration. “The biggest inevitable tradeoff is between low-power and high-bandwidth, or high-speed. In general, high-speed amplifiers require the fast charging and discharging of the gate capacitances of the internal transistors. This requires increases in bias and supply currents, which often leads to increased offset current and voltages. While high-speed op amps have improved significantly in these parameters, they still tower a magnitude above their low-speed, precision counterparts.“However, there are circuit topologies that aim for increased precision while trading only a minute portion of their high-speed performance. These designs, known as composite amplifiers, consist of a precision amp in open-loop and a high-speed amp in a closed-loop differentiator configuration.” Complesity of Picking Right Op-amp The multiple novel circuit topologies that have appeared over the past few decades to deal with problems such as temperature drift and power consumption can have unexpected side effects that designers need to take into account. That adds to the complexity of picking the right op amp. Logan points to the use of chopper-stabilised amplifiers. “These are great for low offsets, but push the noise out to a single frequency. One that pushes it out to 60kHz is great for DC, but if you have signals that reach 50kHz, you start to get into the noise skirt. These are nuanced things you might not see immediately from the datasheet.” Frequency-related interactions often need careful examination, says Byrd, and datasheets should show them. “If the output impedance is relatively low and unchanging over a frequency range, it is normally indicative that the op amp will be more stable than one that does have a wide varying output impedance. The output impedance will be interacting directly with the op amp load, and normally a capacitor, it would create various filters as the frequency and therefore the output impedance changes.” Kugelstadt says interactions with manufacturing choices at the PCB level can introduce unforeseen issues. “High-precision designs using auto-zeroing amplifiers can suffer in precision from asymmetric circuit design. Here, the solder joints around the amplifier form thermocouples that contribute more differential input voltage than the specified offset in the data sheet. Customers unfamiliar with this pitfall blame the device manufacturer for overstating its device performance. The remedy is good application support, such as including layout guidelines in the application section of the data sheet.” Design Issues TI marketing manager Ying Zhou points out that the need to consider how the op amp is designed, particularly if the op amp is being co-opted for a secondary purpose. “If a dual- or quad-channel op amp is already used elsewhere on the board, sometimes the engineers would assign the left channels for comparator functions,” she says.Although many op amps have input clamping diodes to protect the input transistors but these can affect their behaviour as comparators. Zhou says ‘mux friendly’ versions of op amps that remove the clamps make them more suitable for use as comparators. Logan notes: “Getting an evaluation kit and putting it on the board is a great thing to do. There is a lot of pin compatibility out there, so you can easily drop another one in to check its performance. But, you do have the issue of having a lot to choose from.” The industry continues to strive to create the ‘ideal op amp’ and, although we continually get closer to that ideal, there will always be design trade-offs among speed, noise, power usage, size, et cetera. These trade-offs, coupled with continually growing application specific needs, will continue to drive a variety of amplifier types.”
kynix On 2017-11-23
SummaryIron-air batteries promise a considerably higher energy density than present-day lithium-ion batteries. In addition, their main constituent -- iron -- is an abundant and therefore cheap material. Scientists from Forschungszentrum Jülich are among the driving forces in the renewed research into this concept, which was discovered in the 1970s. Together with American Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), they successfully observed with nanometre precision how deposits form at the iron electrode during operation. A deeper understanding of the charging and discharging reactions is viewed as the key for the further development of this type of battery rechargeable to market maturity. The results were published in the journal Nano Energy--Charging and discharging reactions during operation shown with nanometer precision. BodyFor reasons including insurmoutable technical difficulties,research into metal-air batteries was abandoned in the 1980s for a long time.The past few years, however, have seen a rapid increase in research interest. Iron-air batteries draw their energy from a reaction of iron with oxygen. In this process, the iron oxidizes almost exactly as it would during the rusting process. The oxygen required for the reaction can be drawn from the surrounding air so that it does not need to be stored in the battery. These material savings are the reason for the high energy densities achieved by metal-air batteries. Iron-air batteries are predicted to have theoretical energy densities of more than 1,200 Wh/kg. By comparison, present-day lithium-ion batteries come in at about 600 Wh/kg, and even less (350 Wh/kg) if the weight of the cell casing is taken into account. Lithium-air batteries, which are technically considerably more difficult and complicated to realize, can have energy densities of up to 11,400 Wh/kg. When it comes to volumetric energy density, iron-air batteries perform even better: at 9,700 Wh/l, it is almost five times as high as that of today's lithium-ion batteries (2,000 Wh/l). Even lithium-air batteries have "only" 6,000 Wh/l. Iron-air batteries are thus particularly interesting for a multitude of mobile applications in which space requirements play a large role. "We consciously concentrate on research into battery types made of materials that are abundant in the Earth's crust and produced in large quantities," explains institute head Prof. Rüdiger-A. Eichel. "Supply shortages are thus not to be expected. The concept is also associated with a cost advantage, which can be directly applied to the battery, particularly for large-scale applications such as stationary devices for the stabilization of the electricity grid or electromobility." What Cause These Difficulties?The insights obtained by the Jülich researchers create a new basis for improving the properties of the battery in a targeted manner. Using in situ electrochemical atomic force microscopes at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, they were able to observe how deposits of iron hydroxide particles (Fe(OH)2) form at the iron electrode under conditions similar to those prevalent during charging and discharging. "The high pH of 13.7 alone represents a borderline condition for the instrument," explains Henning Weinrich from Jülich's Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK-9). "We were the first at Oak Ridge to successfully conduct such an experiment under realistic conditions," says Weinrich, who stayed in the USA for three months especially for the measurements. Capacity IncreasingWe should notice that deposits do not decrease the power of the battery.On the contrary, since the nanoporous layer increases the active surface area of the electrode, it contributes to a small increase in capacity after each charging and discharging cycle. Thanks to the investigations, the researchers have for the first time obtained a complete picture of this layer growth. "It was previously assumed that the deposition is reversed during charging. But this is obviously not the case," explains Dr. Hermann Tempel from Jülich's Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK-9). Furthermore, a direct link was verified for the first time between the layer formation at the electrode surface and the electrochemical reactions. There is, however, still a long way to go until market maturity. Although isolated electrodes made of iron can be operated without major power losses for several thousand cycles in laboratory experiments, complete iron-air batteries, which use an air electrode as the opposite pole, have only lasted 20 to 30 cycles so far.
kynix On 2017-11-22
Summary As we all know,in case of macro photography or close-up portraits,the availability of a proper lightning source can dramatically improve the final result. For this a soft light, possibly white, not a flash is essential. The LED ring project we are presenting is not only useful for still photography but can be used for video and stop-motion animations. Project Goals Some years ago I started a similar design of a non-portable, white ring light based on a small round neon tube, but soon I abandoned the project due to the difficulty to use it in real, outdoor applications. Really it did not work well outside a photography studio. This idea came back to life when I found a very cheap, PCB LED ring on sale at a local Chinese store. It is a simple, circular design with 24 LEDs powered by either 6 or 12 VCC.Even though this little LED ring was designed for car lighting effects, its diameter and size are perfect for the photographic application I had in mind. Component is very affordable indeed. Portable battery operated Lightweight and easy to carry Variable light intensity Compact battery pack Working in almost every condition, but not underwater Circuit Schematics As shown in the schematics, the LED ring output VCC is triggered by a 4.7K potentiometer to control the intensity. An inline switch (not included in the schematics) is placed between the battery and the rest of the circuitry to turn the LED ring On/Off. The power cable connects to the battery pack through a power jack for better portability. The resulting PCB layout has been designed to fit inside the battery pack cover box fixed with some hot glue. Parts Model Design First of all, I designed the LED ring container; the back support is 3D-printed, while the clear front cover is cut with a CNC router from a sheet of Perspex 1,8 mm thin. Also the battery container is built in two 3D-printed parts: the battery container and the box cover hosting the control circuit. The LED ring is holding the camera through a support fixed to the external flash socket, cut with a CNC router from 3mm Perspex laminate. Power The LED ring is powered by 12 rechargeable 2100 mA/h AA batteries. The batteries, connected in series, are inside two, 6 AA battery holders. Because the LED ring needs to remain powered during the entire photo shoot, testing has been conducted to see how long the batteries will last. This testing showed they provide sufficient power for hours of continuous usage. Dimmer Circuit Design The easiest way to control the dimming intensity is via PWM control. For this project I decided not to use a microcontroller to control the light intensity. Instead I used a simple NE555 IC in an astable configuration. To calculate the component values needed, a few simple inputs were used to determine the proper ratings. Our max rating VCC power is 12V (the nominal battery power is about 14 V when fully charged) The NE555 operates at a maximum rating of 15V For the output current level we will use a NPN P2222A transistor supporting up to 800 mA The LED ring works at a max power rating of about 500 mA Final Design The complete design consists of three main parts: The battery pack The ring camera support The LED ring Everything easily fits into the camera bag when not in use. When you want to use it the LED ring, simply attach it to the camera and then use the long power cord (120 cm) to connect it to the battery in the camera bag. This length of cable has been more than suffieient for all the work that I have done to date.
kynix On 2017-11-21
SummaryResearchers at Caltech have developed a prototype miniature medical device that could ultimately be used in “smart pills” to diagnose and treat diseases. This is critical for the function of biosensors and smart pills. A key to the new technology—and what makes it unique among other microscale medical devices—is that its location can be precisely identified within the body, something that proved challenging before. The picture is about an ATOMS microchip localized within the gastrointestinal tract. bodyCalled ATOMS, which is short for addressable transmitters operated as magnetic spins, the new silicon-chip devices borrow from the principles of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in which the location of atoms in a patient's body is determined using magnetic fields. The microdevices would also be located in the body using magnetic fields—but rather than relying on the body's atoms, the chips contain a set of integrated sensors, resonators, and wireless transmission technology that would allow them to mimic the magnetic resonance properties of atoms. The ATOMS device seen next to a penny. The device has a surface area of 1.4 square millimeters, 250 times smaller than a penny. A key principle of MRI is that a magnetic field gradient causes atoms at two different locations to resonate at two different frequencies, making it easy to tell where they are. The researchers wanted to embody this elegant principle in a compact integrated circuit. ATOMS devices also resonate at different frequencies depending on where they are in a magnetic field. The scientists wanted to make this chip very small with low power consumption, and that comes with a lot of engineering challenges. They had to carefully balance the size of the device with how much power it consumes and how well its location can be pinpointed.The devices are still preliminary but could one day serve as miniature robotic wardens of our bodies, monitoring a patient's gastrointestinal tract, blood, or brain. They could measure factors that indicate the health of a patient—such as pH, temperature, pressure, sugar concentrations—and relay that information to doctors. Or, the devices could even be instructed to release drugs. Microscale and Biosensors You could have dozens of microscale devices and biosensors -traveling around the body taking measurements or intervening in disease. These devices can all be identical, but the ATOMS devices would allow you to know where they all are and talk to all of them at once. The researchers compare it to the 1966 sci-fi movie Fantastic Voyage, in which a submarine and its crew are shrunk to microscopic size and injected into the bloodstream of a patient to heal him from the inside—but, instead of sending a single submarine, you could send a flotilla. The researchers say the devices are still preliminary but could one day serve as miniature robotic wardens of our bodies, monitoring a patient's gastrointestinal tract, blood, or brain. The devices could measure factors that indicate the health of a patient—such as pH, temperature, pressure, sugar concentrations—and relay that information to doctors. Or, the devices could even be instructed to release drugs. This chip is totally unique: there are no other chips that operate on these principles. Integrating all of the components together in a very small device while keeping the power low was a big task. The final prototype chip, which was tested and proven to work in mice, has a surface area of 1.4 square millimeters, 250 times smaller than a penny. It contains a magnetic field sensor, integrated antennas, a wireless powering device, and a circuit that adjusts its radio frequency signal based on the magnetic field strength to wirelessly relay the chip’s location. In conventional MRI, all of these features are intrinsically found in atoms. Ther researchers still had to create an architecture that functionally mimics them for our chip. Article from CaltechArticle edit by kynix
kynix On 2017-11-20
SummaryThe invention of electril trucks has bring a lot of benefit for human being. An electric truck is a truck powered by electricity. For information on trucks using a combination of internal combustion engines and electric propulsion, see Hybrid electric truck. Now they are having a moment in the spotlight,however,they still have a long haul cause the costs and other limitations. Tesla Inc. plans to unveil a semi tractor-trailer this week, its first foray into trucking after more than a decade of making cars and SUVs. German automaker Daimler AG showed off its own electric semi last month and says it could be on sale in a few years. Truck rental company Ryder just added 125 all-electric vans made by California startup Chanje to its fleet. "It's kind of like the checkered flag is being waved," said Glen Kedzie, energy and environmental counsel with the American Trucking Associations. "We've seen different fuels come and go, and electric has gotten to the front of the line." According to the data of Navigant Research, global sales of pure electric trucks are expected to grow exponentially from 4,100 in 2016 to 70,600 in 2026 as battery costs fall and more options enter the market.elivery companies, mail services and utilities will be among the biggest purchasers, and most of the growth will come from Europe, China and the U.S. Most electric trucks on the road will be medium-duty vehicles like delivery vans or garbage trucks. They're quiet and emission-free, and they can be plugged in and charged at the end of a shift. They're ideal for predictable urban routes of 100 miles or less; a longer range than that requires more batteries, which are heavy and expensive. Battery Costs IssueHowever,it's cost that cause a big issue. A medium-duty electric truck costs about $70,000 more than equivalent diesel trucks, according to the consulting firm Deloitte. Buyers considering electrics have to weigh what they can save on fuel and maintenance costs, since electrics have fewer parts.Heavy-duty trucks like electric semis have even further to go before they can be competitive with diesels. Some of those trucks are used for shorter routes, but to achieve a longer range of 300 miles, they require more batteries. Expensive EletrificationDeloitte estimates electrification adds around $150,000 to the cost of a heavy-duty vehicle, or more than double the cost of some diesel tractor-trailers. Electric semi trucks will have the added problem of long charging times and little highway charging infrastructure."I see it being relevant but not ready for prime time," Chanje CEO Bryan Hansel said of long-haul electric trucks. He thinks it will be five years or more before the battery technology and infrastructure can support cross-country electric trucking. "It's a big prize, but the physics haven't caught up yet," he said. Different ThinkingOther analysts,however,believe that this situation will change. Battery costs are expected to fall significantly over the next decade as technology improves. Deloitte expects battery costs for trucks to fall from $260 per kilowatt-hour in 2016 to $122 in 2026. That would cut the cost of a 300 kWh battery pack—like the one in Daimler's prototype semi —from $78,000 to $36,600. At the same time,regulations will drive interest in electric trucks. In the U.S., trucks must meet stricter emissions standards through 2027 under rules that went into effect last year. China is also tightening emissions standards. And several major cities, including Paris and Mexico City, have called for a ban on diesels by 2025 to improve air quality. Incentives are also enticing companies to add electric trucks to their fleets. Companies that buy or lease vans from Chanje are eligible for an $80,000 voucher per vehicle from the state of California, for example. France pays out 10,000 euros ($11,669) to buyers who replace diesel vehicles with electric ones. Companies' GoalsCompanies are also experimenting with electrics—and other alternatives, like natural gas—because they want to meet their own sustainability goals and figure out the optimal mix for their fleets. United Parcel Service, for example, has 300 electric trucks in its global fleet of 100,000 vehicles, mostly in the U.S. and Europe, said Scott Phillippi, UPS's Senior Director of Maintenance and Engineering for international operations. Many of UPS's delivery routes require trucks to travel less than 100 miles per day, a range easily met by an electric truck, Phillippi said. He said electric trucks also help the company take advantage of incentives. UPS has set a goal of having 25 percent of its fleet be made up of alternative fuel vehicles by 2020, in part to encourage manufacturers to keep building and improving such trucks. "The proof of concept time is over," he said. "Everybody is starting to agree it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when."
kynix On 2017-11-17
Join our mailing list!
Be the first to know about new products, special offers, and more.
Feature Posts
How Resistors Work: From Basic Principles to Advanced Applications2025-07-30
DC Switching Regulators: Principles, Selection, and Applications2025-05-30
FPGA vs CPLD: In-depth Analysis of Architecture, Performance and Application2025-05-07
MOSFET Technology: Essential Guide to Working Principles & Applications2025-05-04
SMD Resistor: Types, Applications, and Selection Guide2025-04-30