Course Description
Motors and Controllers for Electric Vehicles
Learn how to design a motor and controller for electric vehicles in this free online engineering course. It seems that the electric motor will replace the internal combustion engine within the next few decades and this free online course helps you to take advantage of the opportunities created by such a change. Aspiring automotive engineers must understand how to design electric motors for electric vehicles and we can train you to implement the engineering principles that drive this fascinating process.
The Motors and Controllers for Electric Vehicles course at Alison is listed in Courses.ie's national courses finder.
| Training Provider | Alison |
| Course Type | Online Learning |
| Course Qualification | CPD Certificate |
| Course Duration | 6-10 hours |
| Course Fee | Free |
| Entry Requirements | Like all courses on the Alison Free Learning platform this is a free, CPD-accredited course. A Graduate can choose to buy a certificate or diploma upon successful completion of a course, but this is not required or necessary. At Alison we believe that free education, more than anything, has the power to break through boundaries and transform lives. Alison is the world’s largest free online empowerment platform for education and skills training, offering over 5000 CPD accredited courses and a range of impactful career development tools. It is a for-profit social enterprise dedicated to making it possible for anyone, to study anything, anywhere, at any time, for free online, at any subject level. Through our mission, we are a catalyst for positive social change, creating opportunity, prosperity, and equality for everyone. |
| Career Path | What You Will Learn In This Free Course • Define Kirchhoff's first and second law • Explain the flow of electrical and magnetic energy inside an electric motor using Ohm's law • Calculate torque inside a PMDC motor • Discuss the role of magnetic flux inside a PMSM • Summarize how to design a field-oriented control • Analyze the ‘Clarke and Park transform’ • Demonstrate how to use Norton's Theorem to design a thermal circuit • Discuss the static and dynamic balancing of a motor |
| Course Code | 3241 |
For more information about Alison, please visit our College page on Courses.ie by clicking here.
