News

Print this page
Friday, 21 January 2022 08:41

Improving the e-Drive NVH performance of your electric vehicle with a digital twin

Written by
Rate this item
(2 votes)

Manufacturers want to reduce the risk of encountering e-drive NVH issues late in the design process. But, optimizing e-drive NVH to create a sound that fits your brand image, is challenging. Where to start? Let’s start here.

Electric vehicle sales are booming

The electric vehicle revolution is well underway. According to BloombergNEF’s recent report, there are currently around 12 million passenger electric vehicles and around one million commercial electric vehicles on the road globally. And this is expected to surge. The growth of passenger electric vehicles is projected to rise from 3.1 million in 2020 to 14 million in 2025.

But as demand grows, and many markets move towards ending the sale of combustion engine vehicles, expectations are increasing too.

Fig.1EVO global EV fleet by segment and market

 

What’s that noise?

As you might know, at Simcenter, we adopt a people-centric approach to the NVH performance engineering of electric cars. When engineering the electric drive, a common complaint is the high-frequency tonal noise of the electric motor and gearbox.

To satisfy their customers, manufacturers need to address these E-Drive NVH issues to give the best results in terms of performance, customer comfort, and satisfaction.

Simple, right?

Not really, given the complexity of the motors and the number of different models that are produced every year. NVH performance analysis has often been left to the end of vehicle development. This makes it difficult to make significant design changes to improve the sounds generated. That’s understandable, given that you need a completed motor to evaluate its NVH performance. But that’s not what customers want, they just want their cars to sound better.

E-Drive NVH hybrid modeling – simulations and testing in perfect harmony

Simulation for success

This is why virtual simulations are so valuable in modern vehicle development. It is exactly the kind of challenge that Simcenter was designed to overcome. Alessandro Lepore, Business Development Manager for Simcenter Engineering Services Solutions recently ran a webinar to show how Simcenter can front-load NVH evaluation in the development cycle to allow manufacturers to build a better product whilst keeping within their cost and time budgets.

Watch the on-demand webinar
and see how Simcenter is a game-changer in E-Drive NVH performance

In the webinar, Alessandro looks at how carrying out e-drive NVH analysis in the earliest stages will avoid issues later. He walks through various customer case studies, including:

  • Vehicle reverse engineering for competitor e-motor benchmarking
  • Inverter switching noise optimization
  • E-drive multi-attribute balancing

He also covers the detailed design stages and how 3D simulation analyzes the complete system from electric currents to radiated noise, and integrating electromagnetic, structural, transmission multi-body, and acoustics analysis. This includes examples from Valeo and Karma Automotive where the Simcenter portfolio enabled enhanced and streamlined NVH performance evaluation in the development process to give them the best possible results.

  

Model the complexity of electric motor transmissions by streamlining all types of analyses into a single simulation environment for a better assessment of E-motor transmission performance.

 

Virtual prototype assembly tool helps predicting e-drive NVH performance

But, as Alessandro points out, simulation on its own isn’t everything. Hybrid modeling, combining test and simulation, delivers the most accuracy. He explains how the Virtual Prototype Assembly tool within Simcenter Testlab facilitates this and allows engineers to develop optimal components. The value of the Virtual Prototype Assembly tool? In a nutshell, it enables to accurately and rapidly predict the NVH performance of any system. It allows collaboration between different areas of the business. Even non-NVH experts can use it to accurately predict the final product NVH performance at any development stage. For more information, read this blog: Master the vehicle NVH performance with a virtual prototype.

 

 

 System NVH performance prediction enables to accurately and rapidly predict the NVH performance of any system.

Read 201465 times Last modified on Wednesday, 09 February 2022 15:18

16938 comments

  • Comment Link Josekah Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:48 posted by Josekah

    Worth saying that the prose reads naturally without straining for style, and a stop at fleetessence maintained the same unforced quality, writing that achieves elegance without effort is the highest tier and this site has clearly worked out how to land that effortless quality consistently rather than only on the writers best days.

  • Comment Link KonnorTub Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:47 posted by KonnorTub

    Worth your time, that is the simplest endorsement I can give, and a stop at trendmarketzone extends that endorsement across the rest of the site, this is one of those increasingly rare places that delivers on what it promises rather than over selling the content and under delivering on substance every time which I find frustrating elsewhere.

  • Comment Link Evannuapy Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:47 posted by Evannuapy

    Decided not to skim despite my usual habit and was rewarded for the discipline, and a stop at trendandstylecorner earned the same patient approach, training myself to recognise sites that warrant slower reading is part of being a careful online reader and this site is the kind that helps me practice that skill regularly.

  • Comment Link Seanfroma Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:46 posted by Seanfroma

    Just want to say thank you for putting this together, posts like these make searching online actually worth it sometimes, and a quick look at brightwoodmarket kept that going, useful and easy to read without any of the tricks that ruin most blog comment sections lately on the wider open web.

  • Comment Link Keenaneduby Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:42 posted by Keenaneduby

    If you scroll past this site without looking carefully you will miss something, and a stop at mistyharbortrends extended that mild warning, the surface of the site does not advertise its quality loudly which means careful attention is required to recognise what is being offered here which is itself a kind of editorial signal.

  • Comment Link TannerPen Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:40 posted by TannerPen

    Skipped past the first paragraph thinking it was setup and had to come back when the rest referenced it, and a stop at domelounge similarly rewarded careful reading from the start, content where every paragraph carries weight is content I now know to read from the beginning rather than skipping ahead.

  • Comment Link Seanglirl Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:33 posted by Seanglirl

    Decided I would read the archives over the weekend, and a stop at portmill confirmed that the archives would be worth the time, very few sites have archives I would actively read through but this one has earned that level of interest based on the consistent quality across what I have sampled so far.

  • Comment Link FabianInsip Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:23 posted by FabianInsip

    Now placing this in the same category as a few other sites I have come to trust, and a look at keencluster continued the placement decision, the small category of fully trusted sites is one I extend rarely and only after multiple positive reading sessions and this site has earned the category placement methodically over time.

  • Comment Link Ericmar Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:23 posted by Ericmar

    Liked that the post landed without needing to manufacture controversy or take a contrarian stance for attention, and a stop at lushmeadowgallery continued that grounded approach, content that earns attention through quality rather than provocation is the kind that builds long term trust rather than burning it on quick wins.

  • Comment Link RonaldKib Sunday, 24 May 2026 16:22 posted by RonaldKib

    Solid stuff, the kind of post that I will probably refer back to later this month when the topic comes up again, and a look at newgrovehorizon only confirmed I should bookmark the site as a whole rather than just this single page for future reference and use across coming weeks.