Dear Student,
Here are the courses -
Let’s see the distribution of work in EV companies -
Electrical engineers are needed for rapid and on-board charging, motor controller development, and motor design.
Design, modelling, and testing for battery packs and cells by chemical engineers
Thermal engineers: thermal management of various vehicle components and thermal modelling
Mechanical engineers are responsible for creating each individual part and vehicle.
Engineers for embedded hardware, software, and testing
They have a wide range of engineers, including CAE engineers, thermal engineers, embedded engineers, vehicle simulation engineers, design engineers, software and hardware design engineers, power electronic engineers, quality control, prototyping engineers, emi/emc engineers, system architects and integration engineers, harness development engineers, testing engineers, etc.
All of these individuals come from the aforementioned basic engineering departments and have specialised knowledge in particular fields. As a result of my experience, I can state that if you have the necessary expertise and knowledge, your engineering branch doesn't really matter if you want to work in the EV business.
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