EV Electrical Systems for Student Teams: An Iterative Design Approach with Practical Lessons
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Date
2025-05-22
Authors
Advisor
Fraser, Roydon
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
The shift toward vehicle electrification has created an urgent need for engineering students to acquire
practical knowledge in electric vehicle (EV) systems. While industry and academia offer theoretical
instruction, student design teams often lack practical guidance, resulting in preventable errors, safety
risks, and incomplete competition vehicles. This thesis addresses that gap by identifying key lessons
to learn for building EV electrical systems and offering real-world insights through a case study of the
University of Waterloo Alternative Fuels Team (UWAFT) during the EcoCAR 5 competition.
The thesis is structured around three primary electrical domains: High Voltage (HV), Low Voltage
(LV), and Serial Communication Systems. Each chapter begins with generalized best practices, safety
procedures, and design considerations, then explores how UWAFT applied—or struggled to apply—
these concepts in practice.
In the HV domain, the thesis covers critical safety mechanisms like Isolation Monitoring Devices
(IMDs), Emergency Disconnect Systems (EDS), and Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) procedures. It
highlights common student pitfalls such as improper cable terminations and the consequences of
electromagnetic interference (EMI).
The LV section details harness design, schematic development, wire selection, and assembly
techniques essential for powering 12V components safely and reliably. Emphasis is placed on
documentation, modularity, and physical protection of circuits.
In the Serial Communication chapter, the CAN bus protocol is explained in the context of a complex
vehicle network involving autonomous driving, propulsion control, and diagnostics. The harness
assembly techniques from the LV chapter are expanded upon for the specific case of CAN cables.
Finally, UWAFT’s Serial Network Diagram (SND) serves as a practical guide to organizing and
troubleshooting communication systems.
Through a combination of foundational theory and applied case study, this thesis equips student teams
with a framework for developing safe, functional, and competition-ready EV electrical systems. It
also highlights the importance of mentorship, iterative learning, and documentation in engineering
education.
Description
Keywords
student team, electric vehicles, iterative design, practical lessons, part selection