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Demands for better

fuel economy and


more electric power
are driving cars
to multiple
higher voltages

ITHIN THE NEXT 10 YEARS,the electrical systems Iwo main forces are driving cars to multivoltage systems-
in some luxury automobiles will be so changed as to the quest for ever-greater fuel economy and the emergence of
be almost unrecognizable Although they will new power-hungry automotive functions. Novel electrical equip-
doubtless employ the old reliable 12-V lead-acid battery, their ment, like electromechanical valve actuators and active suspen-
loads will be driven by a variety of voltages, both ac and dc, per- sions, will triple the aggregate electrical power demand in some
haps derived from a single ac distribution network. Designers will cars-from 800 W today to an average of 2500 W and a peak
be able to match voltages to individual loads for best efficiency value above 12 kW by perhaps as early as 2005. That power can
and performance-lights perhaps at 6 V ac, electronics at 5 V dc, be more effectively distributed and utilized at voltages much
active suspension at 350 V dc, and motors and actuators at 42 V higher than today's I 2 V dc.
dc. The digital signals controlling those loads will be carried by a All the same, a large, complex infrastructure now supports the
separate communications network [Fig. 11 12-V system with components and services Surmounting this
That, at least, is how a working group of engineers from mak- obstacle will require agreement within the industry on many new
ers of autos and automotive components envision the electrical system parameters, and reaching that agreement will take time.
systems of luxury vehicles in the 2005-2015 time frame T h e
group, which gathered under the auspices of the Massachusetts The case for electrical efficiency
Institute of Technology at the request of Mercedes-Benz AG, For better fuel economy, many devices now driven directly by
expects the technology to spread to less opulent models as costs the engine will be driven electrically, That way, the speed of, say,
drop [see "Planning for 2005,'' p. 271. the water pump and the cooling fan can be varied to match the load
Semiconductors, of course, are the enabling technology that or even turned off when not needed. To get the most out of switch-
will make it all possible (as well as making it all necessary). T h e ing to electric drive, the requisite electric motors should be operat-
costs of solid-state power converters, switches, and logic devices ed at voltages substantially above 12 V to boost their efficiency.
have been dropping steadily. T h e cost per watt today is less than Fuel economy also dictates that electricity be distributed at
half what it was in 1990 and is fast arriving at a level that is prac- higher voltages, to reduce ohmic losses without resorting to a
tical for certain automotive applications. heavy and expensive harness of large-gauge wire. Improving the
electrical system's efficiency so it lops 100 W off the average elec-
trical load has the same effect on fuel economy as reducing the
JOHN G. KASSAKIAN Massachusetts lnstitute o f Technology, car's weight by 50 kg, as measured by the FTP (Federal Test Pro-
HANS-CHRISTOPH WOLF Mercedes-Benz AG, cedure) 75 standard profile of starts, runs, and stops [Fig. 21
JOHN M.MILLER Ford Motor Co., 6; Even more to the point, the U.S. Corporate Average Fleet Ef-
ficiency (CAFE) standard prescribes a maximum fuel consump-
CHARLES J. HURTONGeneral Motors Corp. tion rate for cars sold in the United States. The Federal govern-

22 0 0 1 8 ~ 9 2 3 5 / 9 6 / $ 50 0 0 1 9 9 6 I E E C ILLL SPFCTRCIM A U G U S T IQ96


[ I ] A trend toward localized control of loads is evident
in these three versions of electrical distribution systems
for automobiles.
With the present 12-V distribution network, drivers
control loads through manual switches or relays. Wiring
aggregates at a fuse box, from which it travels through-
out the vehicle to the electrical loads.
The near-future (circa 2005) topology employs a com.
munications bus to transmit signals from paint-af-ean-
trol switches to remote power switches in distribution
boxes. The power bus fans out to the loads through
semiconductor switches under control of the communi-
cations bus.
In the distant future loads will connect to the power
bus at their locations in the vehicle. Such an architecture
easily accommodates options and system changes.

rise to 50 percent. If the partnership's green car is


not to be a bare-bones model, then it will have to
incorporate a truly superior electrical system.
Another strong motivator for electrical efficien-
cy is the high cost of automotive electricity-a lot
more than homeowners pay for theirs. The cost (can
be calculated in a straightforward way. Gasoline has
a heat energy content of 43.5 megajoules per kilo-
gram and a density of 0.73 kg/L, which gives it a
volumetric energy content of about 32 MJ/L, or
8.8 kWh/L. Thus if the engine efficiency is 40 per-
cent and the alternatorhelt efficiency is 45 percent,
a liter of gasoline furnishes approximately 1.6 kWh
to a car's electrical system. Assuming a gasoline
price of US 34 cents per liter, the cost of generating
electricity in a car works out to about 21 cents per
kilowatt-hour, substantially more than the 8 cents
per kilowatt-hour average price of residential ellec-
tricity in the United States.

Overcoming load-dump tyranny


Power electronics in future automobiles will
perform two functions: simple odoff switching
(now done by relays and manual switches) and
controlling loads with logic, inverters, and dc-
dc converters. Together, the two classes of pow-
er electronics involved will not only accommo-
ment assesses a penalty of US $5 for every 0.1 mile per gallon date higher voltages but also overcome basic defects in the
(0.04 kilometer per liter) below 27.5 mi/gal (8.55 UIOO km) on conventional 12-V system, such as widely varying system
every car the manufacturer sells. A 200-W electrical load voltage and destructively high voltage transients.
accounts for about 0.4 km/L in the FTP 75 cycle test, so, iF a man- T h e voltage in a 12-V system actually ranges from about (3 V
ufacturer is delivering 25-mi/gal (9.41 U100 km) cars, for exam- to 16 V, depending on the alternator output current, battery age
ple, it can justify spending more per vehicle on components to and state of charge, and other factors. Loads are sized to func-
improve electrical efficiency. tion properly at the lowest system voltage, thus, when the volt-
At present, when U.S. and European fuel economy tests are age is higher, they draw more current than necessary. Load com-
conducted, only those electric loads essential t o the operation of ponents therefore need to be rated for continuous operation at
the vehicle are active-that is, the ignition and engine electron- the highest current.
ics. Lights, air-circulating blowers for the passenger compart- Then there is the notorious load-dump transient, a voltage
ment, entertainment electronics, power windows, and so forth spike that appears on the system when a fully loaded alternator
are all turned off for the tests. But this could soon change. If a suddenly loses its load-for example, when a charging battery is
typical average electrical load is required during tests, the elec- inadvertently disconnected. The voltage behind the alternator's
trical performance of the car will become much more visible. armature reactance then suddenly shows up on the system, a
Nowhere will this visibility be greater than in the 80-milgal 40-v, 100-ms transient if the alternator is protected by avalanche
"green" car. A midsized car resembling a Ford Taurus or Chevrolet diodes, and 80 V or more if it is not. T h e switches and load com-
Lumina, it is the goal of the U.S.Partnership for a New Generation ponents therefore have to be rated for temporary overvoltages at
of Vehicles (PNGV), which comprises 11 Government agencies least four times the nominal system voltage.
and the Big Three's U.S. Council for Automotive RNesearch This requirement is an expensive one, especially for semicon-
(European manufacturers are pursuing the same goal, a car that ductor switches. A load dump may never occur during the life of
consumes 3 VI00 km.) But unless the electrical system in today's a car, yet components have t o be ready to handle it. T h e result
car models is improved, over 25 percent of the green car's fuel will is that load devices have to be grossly overrated both for con-
go to electrical loads. And if some mechanical functions swch as air tinuous current and transient voltage.
conditioning and power steering are electrified, that fraction could In future cars, however, power electronic converters will pro

KASSAKIAN ET AL ~ ALITOMOTIVE ELECTKICAL SYSTEMS CIRCA 2005 23


convenience, the heated windshield, for example. Most of the
new loads would benefit from a voltage higher than 12 V dc,
and several, such as the electromechanical valves and active sus-
pension, would require much higher voltages.
Incidentally, the group took an electrically driven air-condi-
tioning compressor into consideration as a future electrical load. Its
chief advantage would be packaging flexibility, since a drive belt
would no longer be needed and the compressor could be placed
anywhere in the vehicle. Also, with electric drive, the compressor
speed could be varied to match the cooling load efficiently. But the
load would be very large, and since it is now supplied effectively
by a mechanical drive, the merits of conversion to an all-electric
compressor drive in high-end cars are controversial.
There is little doubt, though, that the green car envisioned by
the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles will be elec-
trically air conditioned. That midsized car will have t o be de-
signed to cut the cooling load to i .5kW, however-about half
of what today's equivalent cars consume.
T h e loads that are included on the list seem amply justified.
A case in point is the active suspension system, whose introduc-
tion may very likely parallel that of air conditioners in automo-
biles. Thirty years ago, few cars had air conditioning, today it is
difficult to buy a car in the United States without it. When first
introduced, air conditioning was a very expensive option-up
vide an interface between the alternator and the distribution sys- to 10 percent of the purchase price of the car. It also put a big
tem, making it unnecessary to overrate components T h e alter- dent in fuel economy at a time when the price of gasoline was
nator in such a car can be allowed to generate an unregulated higher in real dollars than it is today. But the comfort it afford-
output that varies with engine speed; power-conditioning cir- ed was so valued by consumers that within a decade, air condi-
cuitry will take that output and turn it into a constant, transient- tioning became dejacto standard equipment.
free system voltage for distribution. It will then be unnecessary T h e MIT group foresees a similar future for active suspension
to overrate either the load components or the semiconductor systems, which keep the passenger compartment on a flat tra-
devices that control them. jectory as the car wheels swerve and bounce over potholes, ruts,
Semiconductor manufacturers are doing their part in develop- and rough roads. T h e systems sense a vehicle's vertical accelera-
ing advanced power devices for cars. For example, Siemens AC, tions and energize electromechanical actuators t o counter them
in Munich, now offers smart power switches expressly for auto- [Fig. 31. Expensive, heavy, and power-intensive (although not
motive service. These MOSFET devices not only do high-side energy-intensive), an active suspension system will need volt-
switching, disconnecting the load from the supply voltage bus ages of about 350 V to operate efficiently. But it can improve a
instead of from ground, but they also shut down if their temper- rider's comfort to the same extent that air conditioning did, and
ature rises excessively. They also can protect themselves against car buyers will probably embrace it just as enthusiastically.
overcurrents, and act as resettable fuses with the aid of associat-
ed logic, either monolithically integrated with the MOSFET or No timing chain
packaged with it as a hybrid integrated circuit. ther case in point is electromechanical valve control.
Until recently, a big impediment to acceptance of power today's engines, a camshaft acts on the valve stems to
MOSFETs in automobiles has been their high on-state drain-to- en and close the valves. As the crankshaft drives the
source resistance, known as RDs(on)Typically, has been camshafts through gears or a chain or belt, the timing of the
100 m n for a device switching 10 A, giving a 1 -V /orward drop valves' openings and closings is controlled by the cam design,
at a junction temperature of 125 "C and dissipating 10 W-not and is fixed relative to piston position. This means that engine
particularly efficient. Now, however, Siliconix Inc., Santa Clara, performance (in terms of emissions or fuel economy) is optimal
Calif., offers power MOSFETs, made by trench technology, that over only a narrow range of engine speed.
have an R,,,(,,,of
, only 16 m a at a substantially higher junction If the valves were electromechanically actuated, however,
temperature, 175 "C.Other manufacturers are beginning to offer they could be opened and closed without regard to crankshaft
similar devices. position. They could operate optimally at all engine speeds,
Further, as noted, the cost of power electronic converters is torque levels, temperatures, and any other variables the design-
rapidly approaching the low levels that make them practical in er includes. In fact, valve timing could be made part of a closed-
cars. From 50 cents per watt in 1990, the cost has dropped to loop emission-control system
15-20 cents per watt for converters with 100-3000-w ratings. Moreover, an electromechanical system would eliminate the
When costs fall to 5-10 cents per watt, wide penetration of the heavy and complicated camshafts and timing chains or gears.
automotive market can be expected. T h e valves would be actuated by sending current pulses through
spring-loaded solenoids with the valve stems as their cores.
Laying the groundwork Electromechanical valves offer other interesting possibilities.
T h e MIT working group came up with a list of features it For example, the valves can all be opened at the beginning of en-
anticipated would be offered as options in luxury car models for gine start-up, relieving compression and greatly reducing the
the year 2005, and calculated their electric power demands for cranking torque needed, so that smaller batteries and starter mot-
both summer and winter [see table]. Some of these loads, such ors could be used. In fact, the peak power of the starter motor
as the water pump, replace existing mechanical loads, some, like might be close to that of the alternator, so that a combined
the electrically heated catalytic converter, are a response to reg- startedalternator might become feasible. The starting torque
ulatory mandates, and some are suggested by safety or driver might even be so low that the engine could be turned over

24 IEEE SPECTRUM AUGUST 1996


through the fan belt at start-up, and the combined starterlalterna- ed that the present 12-V dc system cannot be upgraded to handle
tor could then simply be mounted in the place now occupied by future electrical loads; it would cost too much, weigh too much,
the alternator. and be too inefficient. Instead, the 12-V alternator will be replaced
by a more efficient, higher-voltage design. Instead of being inter-
Start without moving nally regulated at a constant voltage; the its voltage (and power)
Even more intriguing, when combined with direct fuel injec- will increase with speed, so that its full capacity is exploited. An
tion, electromechanical valves may be able t o start an engine external power electronic interface will take that unregulated out-
statically, with no initial rotation whatsoever. Valves t o the put and produce well-regulated ac or dc-or both.
appropriate cylinders would be closed, and fuel would be inject- T h e battery will still be a 12-V unit, though, because it will
ed into them and ignited, turning over the engine. If static start- be the most reliable and economical electricity storage medium
ing should prove feasible, the battery could be designed for available. New battery technologies may eventually be practical
energy storage only, not for cranking power, and its 'size could for automobiles, but not by 2005. Doubling the battery voltage
be much reduced. t o 24 V would have a disproportionate effect not only on cost
Another new kind of load, the electrically heated catalytic con- per ampere-hour, but also on reliability because of the greater
verter, is a direct response to environmental concerns and man- number of cells and thinner plates.
dates. T h e electric heater will get the catalytic converter up t o An essential part of the new electrical distribution system will be
temperature quickly, which is important because a converter can load management. It will ensure that advanced loads, such as the
reduce nitrogen emissions only when it is hot; the electriiz heater active suspension, get the high power they need for the brief time
ensures that it gets hot within a few seconds after engine start-up they need it, coordinating power demands so that the alternator
instead of the many minutes required for heating by exhaust gas- and power converters will not have to be sized unrealistically. It
es. In fact, one proposal calls for preheating the catalytic convert- will also ensure that safety-critical loads such as power brakes and
er from a dedicated battery before start-up. Such heatel-s could steering take precedence, and that "key-off" loads-the clock and
eliminate a large source of pollution-
emissions from cold engines.

Learning from MAESTrO


In examining the costhenefit attrib-
utes of active suspensions, electro-
mechanical valves, and other electric
loads, the MIT working group used a
computer program called MAESTrO
(for Multiattribute Automotive Electri-
cal System Tradeoff),which MITk Lab-
oratory for Electromagnetic and Elec-
tronic Systems originally developed for
Mercedes-Benz. The program takes as
its input the network topology and
load types, voltages, powers, and duty
ratios (load factors). It then determines
the parameters of the loads (such as
cost, weight, and efficiency), wires [2] The FTP (fur Federal Test Procedure) 75 driving cycle is a standard for measuring fuel economy. It sub-
(such as gauge and loss), converters jects a car to a series of starts, runs at various speeds, and stops for prescribed periods. The only electri-
(weight and loss), transformers, and cal loads marndalted during an FTP 75 test are those necessary to operate the vehicl-that is, ignition
and engine control electronics. That may change, though; typical average operating loads may be added.
other components from its built-in
models, and produces as output the sys-
tem attribute values for specific designs 8
showing how they compare [Fig. 41.
For example, design A may be light-
er than design B but may cost sub-
stantially more. Design B may cost
half as much as C, but C may be con-
siderably more energyefficient. With
these MAESTrO-generated plots, it
is easy to identify a "Pareto-optimal
frontier'-that is, a line along which
all designs are equally "good" but have
different degrees of acceptability.
With this program, unacceptable
designs can be eliminated, narrowing
the field of acceptable possibilities and
making final selection a tractable and
structured task. With the help of this units accelerometers
program, the MIT working group was
able to probe the key issues and reach
[3] An active suspension keeps passengers on an even keel by sensing accelerations and controlling
a consensus with deliberate speed. actuators at several points on the chassis. The suspension system demands high peak power-about
And what is the consensus? Not 12 kW. Although its average power consumption is a modest 200400 W,the energy storage com-
surprisingly, the group quickly decid- ponents and electrical distribution network must be able to handle the high peak load.

KASSAKIAN ET AL - A U T O M O T I V E ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS CIRCA 2005 25


[4]The MAESTrO pro-
gram plots the attributes
of cost, weight, and loss-
es to make tradeoff anal-
ysis easier. Here car
design A is lighter than
car design B, but costs
5 3
A

;1
much more. The cost of B
is only half that of C, but
C is much more energy-
efficient. A is said to be
"dominated" by C and B
q0
0
, , ~ ,A
weight
5
, , , ,
10 0
, ,c; , ~

Losses
5
, , BA ,
10
with respect to cost ver-
sus losses.

[5]A hypothetical electrical distribution system of the future delivers power to loads over a high-voltage, medium-frequency bus. The alternator's ac out-
put is converted to regulated ac for the bus and dc for the battery. Distribution boxes convert the ac bus voltage to whatever is needed by local loads.

security system+an draw power when the engine i s offr but not incandescent lamps are so rugged and so much easier to focus than
discharge the battery to the point where the car cannot be started. 12-V units that some manufacturers may return to them, especial-
Loads will be switched on and off by semiconductor switch- ly for cars with ac distribution, where transformers make down-
es controlled through a data bus of optical fiber o r copper. T h e converting from the high-voltage bus especially easy.
power MOSFET is the switching device of choice because i t is For headlights, high-intensity gas o r metal-vapor discharge
efficient and rugged and its manufacturing technology is well technology will probably replace tungsten. They are already
understood and widely practiced. Moreover, MOSFET power available as an option in the new Mercedes-Benz E-class car,
switches can be driven directly by a car's electronic control units. providing twice the light at half the power.
Whether the distribution is ac, dc, or a mixture of both will Motors and actuators will definitely benefit from a higher,
depend on manufacturers' individual choices, and their assump- regulated voltage; at 12 V, motors lose 15 percent of their ener-
tions about cost, performance, manufacturability, controllability, gy in the brushes alone. T h e dc motor, brushed or brushless, will
repairability, adaptability, and reliability. Whatever the electrical be the choice for most applications such as fans and pumps be-
distribution architecture, it should be compatible with existing cause of its efficiency at high voltage, as well as its easy control,
12-V dc loads. This design will allow the present 12-V dc infra- low cost, and high quality and reliability.
structure to be used while new, more efficient, or functionally Where high torque at low speed is needed-in window lifts
improved loads at other voltages are introduced. and windshield wipers, for instance-the ultrasonic motor with
As happens now, lamps and motors will account for most of the its low-profile pancake-like shape i s promising. T h e Lexus al-
electrical load. Incandescent lamps will continue to be powered at ready uses ultrasonic motors to adjust its headrests.
12 V,regardless of whether the power supply is ac or dc, because T h e upper limit on motor voltage will be set by safety con-
tungsten filaments for low voltages are shorter and less fragile than cerns and semiconductor device voltage limitations. Many auto
those that operate at higher voltages. In fact, short-filament 6-v makers favor 42 V dc, which can readily be handled by power

26 IEEE SPECTRUM A U G U S T 1996


MOSFETs made by the standard 60-V process. It corresponds to
the average full-wave rectified output of a single-phase 4-8-vnns
ac distribution source. Also, it is not so high as to present a seri-
ous shock hazard t o humans who accidentally touch it.

The typical model


f these predictions prove correct, what will a "typical" top-of-
the-line automobile in 2005 look like?Although, certainly, vari-
ations among manufacturers can be expected, the model car
has an alternator, directly driven by the engine, that produces a
variable-frequency, variable-voltage output [Fig. 51. From the alter-
nator, a front-end converter creates two outputs: 25 kHz ai3 at 48 V
nns for the main power bus and i 2 V dc for charging the battery.
The dc-ac portion of the converter is bidirectional so the battery
can supply essential loads when the key is off. The starter is still
i 2 V and gets its power from the battery; the power-hun;gryelec-
trically heated catalytic converter takes its power directly from the
alternator.
To minimize wiring complexity, the ac main power bus feeds dis-
tribution boxes located throughout the vehicle. Containing MOS-
FET switches and fuses, the boxes are controlled by a separate data
communication network that allows each box to convert the ac bus
voltage into the voltages needed by the loads it serves. For {example,
a distribution box near the trunk might provide appropriate voltages
to the tail lights, fuel pump, rear window defroster, retractable
antenna, and an audio system. Another distribution box in the pas-
senger compartment might control door locks, windows, side-view
mirrors, compartment lights, and seat heaters.
Figure 5 can also be used t o visualize an exclusively sdc high-
voltage architecture. In this case, the front-end Converter will be microprocessors, and more than two dozen sensors.
an ac-dc-dc converter and dc-dc converters will replace the The t 91 8 edition of Putnami AutomobileHdndboo~-The Cave a n d
transformer-rectifier combinations to provide voltages (different Management of tbe Modern M o t o r Car ( b y H. Clifford Brokaw
from the bus voltage, which will probably be 42 V dc. and C . A. Starr: G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York) told readers: "It
The details of the models of the future will of course varyJ and takes good 'juice' and lots of it t o run a modern auto; not the
some manufacturers may choose to eschew ac distribution alto- kind Uncle Sam has put a ban upon, [but] the electric 'juice.' "
gether. But clearly the new models will b e more power hungry With the possible exception of the nostalgic reference t o the
than today's already complex high-end automobiles, with their Prohibition Era, that observation is pertinent today and will be
1500 wires, innumerable branch points, as many as threle dozen even more true 90 years after it was written. +
To probe further For information about emerging electrical Power Electronics Society and coauthor of
For a description of multiplexed digital com- functions in automobiles, see "The Future the textbook Principles of Power Elec-
munication buses in motor vehicles, see of Vehicle Electrical Power Systems and tronics (Addison-Wesley,Boston, 1991).
"The Thick and Thin of Car Cabling," by Their Impact on System Design" by G. A. Hans-Christoph Wolf is in charge of develop-
Mark Thompson, /€E€ Spectrum, February William!; and M. J. Holt, Proceedingsof the ing future power train management plat-
1996, pp. 42-45. SA€ Future Transportation Technology forms at Mercedes-Benz AG, Stuttgart,
The authors will present their findings in de- Conference and Exposition, Portland, Germany. He was previously responsible
tail in "The Future of Automotive Elec- Ore., Auigust 1991, and "Control of Engine for developing advanced electric power
trical Systems," at the IEEE Workshop on Load via Electromagnetic Valve Actuators" distribution systems for the Advanced En-
Power Electronics in Transportation, to be by Mark A. Theobald, B. Lesquene, and R. gineering Group there.
held in Dearborn, Mich., in October. Henry, SAE paper 940816, February 1994. John M. Miller (SM) is staff technical special-
Two documents constitute the starting point For examples of MAESTrO analyses, see "Al- ist, Vehicle Electrical Systems Department,
of the discussions of t h e working group at ternative Electrical Distribution System Ar- at Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, Mich. His
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. chitectures for Automobiles," a paper by principal interests are control of electric
One is a seminal report by the Society of K. A. Afridi, R. D. Tabors, and J. G. Kassa- machine drives and actuators, and power
Automotive Engineers' (SAE) DuallHigh kian in the Proceedings of the / € E € Work- distribution system architecture. He is ac-
Voltage Study Group, "DuaVHigh Voltage shop ofit Power Electronics in Transporta- tive in the PNGV.
Vehicle Electrical System," by J. Vincent tion, Dearborn, Mich., October 1994. Charles J. Hurton is manager, electrical sub-
Hellman and R. J. Sandel, SAE paper systems and planning, at General Motors
911652. Another is a comprehensive paper About the authors Corp.'s North American Operations Engin-
on high-voltage automotive systems, John G. Kassakian (F) is professor of electrical eering Center Division, Warren, Mich. In
"Design Consideration for Higher Voltage engineering and director of t h e Laboratory earlier assignments at General Motors, he
Automotive Electrical Systems," by M. Mat- for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems was manager, electrical component appli-
ouka, SAE paper 911654. Both appear in at the Massachusetts Institute of Technol- cations, and manager, medium-duty truck
the Proceedings of the SA€ Future Trans- ogy, Cambridge, where h e works in power vehicle electrical systems.
portation Technology Conference and Ex- electronics and automotive electrical sys-
position, Portland, Ore., August 1991. tems. He is founding president of the IEEE Spectrum editor: Michael J. Riezenman

KASSAKIAN ET A L ~ AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS CIRCA 2005 27

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