Electromobility as an Integrated Concept - the Audi e-performance Support Project
Audi developing a holistic approach for electric driving
New project house unites creativity and expertise
The e-performance support project to be launched in October
Audi is working hard on the future of mobility. The company has established a project house for the development of an integrated concept for electric drives in automobiles. As part of this effort, a support project entitled e-performance and funded in part by the German Ministry for Education and Research will be launched on October 1. Institutes and companies from industry and science will be participating in the project.
Audi invests roughly two billion euros in development projects each year. Although the primary focus is on the further advancement of the combustion engine and related technologies, a second priority is electromobility. The e-tron showcar is making a powerful statement in this field at the IAA, and Audi is also in the process of strategically bundling its electromobility activities. Audi has established a project house dedicated to electric driving; it will shortly begin work on a project sponsored by the German federal government. The working group and the project bear the same name: e-performance.
"We are trying to find a concept that requires no compromises," says Michael Dick, Member of the Board of Management of AUDI AG, Technical Development. "Electromobility means more to us than just electrifying conventional cars. Instead, we are dedicated to a holistic approach to all aspects of the topic."
The e-performance project house was established on the premises of Audi Electronics Venture GmbH (AEV). This Audi subsidiary cooperates closely with colleges and universities, research institutes and young startup companies to implement new technologies in the field of electronics. The AEV is located close to the plant grounds, and the project house is staffed by young experts.
"We have a mixture of engineering expertise, creativity and a dose of lateral thinking," says Dr. Michael Korte, Head of the e-performance project house. "The project house brings free thinkers together with technical development experts - with designers, engine and chassis engineers, and software specialists."
Electric drive technology in automobiles still poses many questions at the moment. Audi is striving to provide holistic answers to these questions, thus creating an architecture comprising all sub-areas of the vehicle. Only when new systems and components are made to work together perfectly can the full potential of electromobility be exploited.
Audi is certain that the vehicle concepts will include new, intelligent solutions. "Our holistic concept is complex," says Dr. Christian Allmann, Head of the e-performance support project, "but it is the only way to optimize the primary target parameters of range, performance, reliability, practicality, service life, and cost."