Australia - deadly animals, marsupials, convicts, desert and sun. The perfect place for a solar car race, and this year an American student car with European electronics took part rather successfully.
The success of a solar vehicle lies in its ability to maximize the amount of power harvested during periods of daylight and to efficiently balance power resources and power consumption. Four STM32 microcontrollers track the maximum power point to optimize output from the Xenith-car’s solar arrays, while another STM32 device monitors the voltage, measures the temperature and current, and performs critical operations such as controlling the flow of power through the vehicle. Other STM32 microcontrollers manage communication between the driver, the vehicle, the motor controller, and the rear-wheel steering system, and handle ancillary systems such as lighting, telemetry, and tire-pressure monitoring.
(Photo Credit: Andreas Peña Doll)
»There are many complicated systems in the solar vehicle that must all function and interact without hiccups – and on a minimal energy budget,« said Gregory Hall, Stanford Solar Car Project. »ST’s powerful, flexible and reliable control devices have an extremely powerful peripheral set and high-quality libraries, which made them a perfect match for our project's exacting performance demands and fast development schedule.«
»Stanford‘s decision to build subsystems in their solar car around the STM32 technology confirms ST’s strong position in the embedded application space,« said Michel Buffa, General Manager of ST’s Microcontroller Division. »We are proud to participate in the Stanford Solar Car Project, a highly acclaimed program that combines innovative research and the latest in alternate transport technologies.«
The Stanford Solar Car Project is a student-run, nonprofit effort designed to give students hands-on engineering, project management and business experience while raising awareness of clean-energy vehicles. The team operates on a two-year design-and-build cycle, and is funded by donations.
I have seen this car on our school exhibit maybe 2 or 3 years ago. It was so interesting and a great experience to see it live.
Posted by: CGS Motorsports | 02/14/2012 at 06:31 AM