I apologize if this subject has already been discussed in detail in a thread of its own, but I am new to this and have only just started thinking about the amount of electrical power and time required to re-charge the batteries of electric-powered vehicles.
Gasoline has an energy content of about 160 MJ/gallon (US). So if an average-size/loaded passenger car gets 25 mpg, that is about 6 MJ per mile consumed by the engine. With a gasoline engine thermal efficiency of 20%, that means 1.3 MJ of energy is used to actually move the vehicle one mile.
Assuming a 90% battery charging efficiency and a 90% efficient electric motor/drivetrain, that would mean a charging electrical power consumption of about 500 Watts for one hour for each mile of driving. The maximum practical electrical power supply to a battery charger via conventional 240V household wiring/outlet is about 2 KW. One hour of charging at 2 KW would be worth about 4 miles so charging at this power consumption for 12 hours would be worth about 50 miles per vehicle.
The average year-round electrical power consumption of a family home in the US is currently between 1.5 and 2 KW. So each vehicle charging at this rate for half of each day would increase the total electrical energy consumption of each household by 25%, or a 50% increase for 2 vehicles. There are 110 million households in the US so the amount of additional power required to charge 50 miles for 2 vehicles per household, is 500 GW for half the day, every day. That is about 50% of the total current US generating capacity. Most of this additional load would be during the night when cars are parked, so there would not only be a dramatic increase in electrical energy consumption but also a significant change in characteristic of daily power demand, with peak demand likely occurring during the night instead of the day, as now.
There is talk elsewhere on these boards of charging 70 KWHr car battery systems in 10 minutes at special charging stations. However, this would require about 420 KW of power per battery system. To allow this kind of power flow would require extremely high voltages and/or currents which, in-turn, would require high voltage insulation / large conductors that could not be easily connected to a vehicle system in a temporary fashion.


- just producing enough physical stuff to make any of this work. It boggles the mind.

