The Ultimate Guide to Choosing Heat Pump Electric Car
Heat pumps in electric cars explained
A heat pump is one of those things that nobody had ever heard about a few years ago and now everybody is talking about them. Heat pumps are super-efficient electric heaters and unlike conventional resistance heaters of the sort used in kettles, ovens, or room heaters, they generate more energy in the form of heat than they consume as electricity to power them.
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For an electric car which relies on electrical energy from the battery to heat the cabin, the advantage of using a heat pump to warm the inside of the car compared to a conventional electric heater is obvious, it uses less energy.
The energy a heat pumps saves can be used to power the car and increase range.
How do heat pumps work?
If all that sounds a bit new-fangled and a little hard to swallow, the heat pump concept has been in use for a long time. In fact, most of us have grown up with a form of heat pump in our kitchens better known as the fridge. Most modern cars already have something similar in them too, called air conditioning.
How does a heat pump work? A heat pump used to warm a house or an electric vehicle cabin works on the same principal as a fridge, freezer or air conditioning system, but in reverse. Refreshingly, a heat pump is one of those things that does exactly what the name implies, it pushes heat from one place to another. A heat pump makes things cold by removing heat rather than adding cold and by the same token, a heat pump can warm something or some place by depositing heat its removed from somewhere else.
In simple terms, the refrigeration circuit in a household fridge works like this. Refrigerant gas is compressed in tubing mounted on the back of the fridge which causes it to heat up. The tubing radiates the heat into the room and the gas cools down turning into liquid. While still under pressure, the now liquid refrigerant passes into a series of larger volume tubes winding around inside the chiller compartment of the fridge called the evaporator. The pressure drops, causing the liquid refrigerant to evaporate (just as water evaporating on the skin cools you down) and the inside of the fridge gets cold.
Now imagine the room being the inside of your car, and the chiller compartment of the fridge being exposed to the air outside your car. The reverse fridge, or heat pump, is sucking heat from the outside air and transferring it to the cabin of your car. Surprisingly, this works even in very cold weather, as many Scandinavians heating their homes using heat pumps will testify.
Is a heat pump worth it?
The average internal combustion engine converts less than half of the energy contained in the fuel it burns into power. A small amount of that waste heat can be used to heat the cabin in cold weather but the rest is wasted via the engines cooling system. EVs also generate some heat from the battery and motor and many EVs have liquid-cooled batteries and motors as a result. Some manufacturers combine the heat pump with these cooling systems, so they can not only take heat from the air to warm the cabin but also extract heat from the EVs driveline cooling system as well. Given that the range of an electric car is reduced in the cold winter months, cutting down on energy use for cabin heating is well worth it.
Which electric cars have heat pumps? How much do they cost?
A good number of premium electric cars these days are fitted with heat pumps as standard, including Teslas, Hyundais Ioniq 5, Kias EV6 and BMWs i4 to name a few, but not all premium cars have them so you need to check when buying new. As an option they cost the lions share of £1,000 and they cant be retro-fitted so again, if youre buying secondhand, a little research pays dividends.
What is a heat pump and how can it increase range?
Choosing the best options from lengthy lists can be a tricky business when buying or leasing a new electric car. From reversing cameras to cruise control, voice activation to digital mirrors, the lists can be a mix of daily essentials to the latest luxury playthings.
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Theres one bit of kit, though, that wed recommend all electric car owners go for: the heat pump. Humbly named compared to some technology available, itll keep you warm in the winter while helping to maximise range. Clever, right?
Why have I never heard of a heat pump?
Well, historically cars havent needed them. Inefficient petrol and diesel engines produce waste heat which we learnt to re-use to heat the cabin. By contrast, an electric motor is very efficient and doesnt produce much waste heat at all, so engineers had to find another way to keep us toasty in winter.
The simple answer would be a regular fan heater. Trouble is theyre extremely inefficient and on full blast would use significant amounts of battery and harm range. The solution? An extremely efficient heat pump.
So how does a heat pump work?
Essentially, its a home fridge but in reverse. While a fridge takes the warm air from inside and moves it outside to keep your milk fresh, a car heat pump moves heat out to in. Any excess heat from the battery and electrical systems, plus air outside the car, is compressed at high pressure. This compression raises the temperature which can then be used to heat the cabin. The whole thing takes just seconds.
Will a heat pump really increase my range?
Simply put, yes. Compared to a traditional heater, a heat pump is around three times more efficient. Electric car range drops in cold conditions (you can find out more about how to here), but range tests show that mileage drops around 10% less in the cold on cars fitted with a heat pump compared to those running a fan heater. Heat pumps will work their magic in all temperatures, too, so its not just technology for sub zero climates.
Its also great because a heat pump enables efficient remote pre-conditioning, which means you can set your car to a temperature and let it defrost from the comfort of your home, while watching neighbours wrap up and go to work with an ice scraper. If youre plugged in at home while pre-conditioning then you wont be draining the battery, either, further adding range.
So, what electric cars have heat pumps?
For all the reasons above, heat pumps are becoming increasingly common on the latest electric cars. Some offer them as standard on base spec but more commonly theyll be optional add-ons on a more premium trim level. Unfortunately, a heat pump cant be retro-fitted and will need to have been installed when the car was ordered new from the factory.
Heres a list of some of our top models available to lease via GRIDSERVE Car Leasing that feature heat pumps:
Hyundai Kona Electric
Kia e-Niro
Tesla Model Y
Volkswagen ID.4
Audi Q4 e-tron
Nissan Leaf
Peugeot e208
For more information, please visit Fan Heater Vs Ceramic Heater.
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