Power Electronics Europe Magazine Issue 4 Oct/Nov 2025

10 BATTERY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM https://www.ti.com/ Issue 4 2025 Power Electronics Europe www.power-mag.com The importance of hardware emulation when developing a next-generation automotive BMS In the competitive landscape of vehicle electrification, one thing that original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) cannot compromise on is safety and reliability in hybrid and electric vehicles. The vehicle’s battery management system (BMS) is indispensable for achieving safety and reliability by: Avoiding cell failures. Detecting and reacting to failures quickly through cell and environmental sensor supervision. Continuously monitoring isolation within the vehicle’s high-voltage system. Estimating the vehicle range. Assessing the maximum power for charging or driving. Extending the driving range based on battery pack capacity. Increasing the amount of battery cycles before a battery pack needs to be replaced or recycled. While demands for higher levels of BMS reliability have increased, so has the need for faster development cycles. Given the complexity of these types of systems, OEMs are seeking closer collaboration with system developers, semiconductor companies and their third-party partners to streamline development. Figure 1 shows an example of an electric vehicle (EV) BMS. This collaboration is evident in the software-based simulation capabilities used during BMS development, during which components and systems are tested in both normal and excessive conditions early in the development cycle without physical hardware or an expensive testing space. Tools such as hardware-in-the-loop simulators can emulate a battery module or pack, enabling accelerated development, compact test setups, virtual prototyping, automatic testing, and the ability to develop software for the BMS without a physical battery pack. By simplifying the testing process, emulators can play an important role in accelerating innovation in the BMS field. The advantages of using emulators when developing an automotive BMS Hardware-in-the-loop solutions provide a safe way to simulate the two-pole behavior of battery cells, modules or packs. The output of real, high-precision voltages for all cells is referred to as voltage-level hardware-in-the-loop testing. It is also possible to test the BMS main controller at the signal level and simulate the battery cells and cell supervision units (CSUs). The focus in this approach is to test the functions of the BMS controller and its interaction with the vehicle network (or any other environment) without using actual high voltages. This provides a deeper representation toward the final hardware and is referred to as an emulator. Emulation of both the entire battery pack (or module) and the cell and pack monitors allows for deep and repetitive testing. For example, you could test in the very early development stages using a simulated integrated circuit like the BQ79616-Q1 battery monitor. Another potential use case for testing the BMS controller at the signal level is integration testing with other control units, such as motor controllers or onboard chargers. The functionality of a BMS emulator The dSPACE Cell Controller Virtualization (CCV) can perform comprehensive signallevel BMS testing of cell controller functions without the need for complete hardware, and without high-voltage safety equipment (as shown in Figure 2). One of the advantages of a BMS testing emulator like the dSPACE CCV is that it enables you to conduct tests outside of an expensive, often-booked high-voltage lab environment. Compared to high-voltage Figure 2. Diagram of battery cell, CSU and communication with the main BMS controller simulation when using the dSPACE solution for signal-level BMS testing Figure 1. Typical BMS and battery in an EV

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