Topics: Advanced Technologies
As a new and emerging industry, EV charging infrastructure presents a large and complex domain for engineers who have little to no experience working in this area. What are the key EV charging standards that engineers need to know? What protocols do engineers need to understand? What are the regulations and how do they differ by region? How do these standards, rules, and guidelines interoperate to ensure reliable, interoperable, safe, and secure EV charging?
This course facilitates the use standards and best practices to build a foundation for how and when to use them. It will also introduce communication protocols that establish rules and guidelines for how EV Chargers (EVSE) operate and communicate. The course also includes global regulations according to geographic regions and how they impact engineering and business decisions.
As this domain is complex, with many standards, regulations, and protocols governing it, this course focuses on the primary standards within the U.S. and European markets. The standards included are:
The protocols included are:
Other notable topics included are:
By successfully completing this course, learners will be able to:
This course is intended for Design, Electrical, Mechanical, Hardware/Software, and Testing/Validation Engineers that are looking to begin or transition into the electric vehicle charging industry. It’s also helpful for Safety and Cybersecurity Engineers, Managers, Program/Project Managers, and any other positions that interact with EV charging industry professional or projects.
Email CustomerService@sae.org, or call 1-877-606-7323 (U.S. and Canada) or 724-776-4970 (outside US and Canada).
Mark is the Engineering Team Lead – Charging at APTIV, located in Warren, OH. APTIV has a long track record in the automotive industry as a technological supplier of choice for leading automotive brands. The APTIV team is a market-leader in producing OEM portable EVSEs for the past ~10 years. Mark has been with APTIV for 5+ years, serving in various roles in the charging realm – including DC fast-charge inlets and various international charging interfaces. Now Mark leads a team developing next-generation dual-level portable EVSEs. Active on various standard bodies, Mark supports the shared electrification trend with the sharing of industry insight and best practices.
Beat Kreuter is the Vice President of Business Line Product Safety Testing at DEKRA. Beat hails from Switzerland and has spent 20 years of his professional career in Asia working for different testing and certification companies before returning to Europe. At DEKRA he is responsible for the Business Line Product Safety Testing with special attention to EVs and EV supply equipment as an emerging technology. He is an active member of the CharIN focus group interoperability and conformance and the Open Charge Alliance compliance WG.
Matth is the director of the Technology Group at FLO EV Charging, a North American leader in EV Charging giving access to more than 60,000 charging ports across North America. He has close to 10 years of experience in electromobility delivering a variety of accomplishments across the EV charging value chain. He deployed demand response programs demonstrating the benefits of EV charging flexibility for utility operation, deployed slow & fast charging infrastructure for public, private, and fleet owned & operated networks, certified EVSEs for industry compliance to open market access, drove utilization of charging networks up with innovative roaming strategies, and is now leading the FLO’s efforts in deploying innovative technologies with the next generation of devices like the FLO Ultra.
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