There are no home chargers for EV's like comes with say an electric golf cart with lead acid batteries. In the Leaf the charger is under the hood. The motor is at bottom then there is the 3 phase AC inverter and at the very top the charger is concealed under a cover. What some call the charger is just an very expense smart extension cord. The onboard charger looks at the AC power source and if happy the charger will decide which of the 3 onboard chargers to use. Our 2016 Leaf came with a 120 volt smart charging cord and if fully discharged it would take 20 hours to fully charge the new 40 kWa lithium ion battery. The format of the plug at the car is the J1772 standard.
The industry term is EVSE, Electric Vehicle Service Equipment. As Gale says it is a glorified extension cord. GFI and more. Plus a signal to the vehicle indicating how much it is allowed to draw. If limit exceeded then the EVSE shuts down. Somebodies knew full well idiot drivers would try circuits to see how much current they could draw before tripping circuit breakers if they were allowed to.
Basically L1 (Level 1) charging is 120VAC up to 16A (20A circuit).
L2 (Level 2) is 240VAC less than 20 kW (~80A).
L3 (Level 3) is over 20 kW, usually DC.
Tesla calls the bundled 32A EVSE with plug "Mobile Connector". First and 2nd generation Mobile Connectors could provide 40A via NEMA 14-50 on a 50A circuit.
The optional permanently wired EVSE is "Wall Connector" which can provide up to 80A @ 240VAC (on a 100A circuit) to vehicles which can accept that much. Some wire 50A range pigtails to their Wall Connector to use existing outlets. Recent Model S and X can accept 72A from an L2 circuit.
My Wall Connector is on a 50A circuit and jumpered to indicate such to the car, limiting draw to 40A. The Mobile Connector is smart in that it uses one of multiple proprietary adapter plugs to know what kind of outlet it is connected. It limits current to the vehicle accordingly. It knows if the 5-15 or 14-50 is being used.
I purchased a 240 volt cable (single phase) that is rated to transferring 40 amps from the house but 26 amps is the max the 6.6 amp Leaf charger can draw. It is on a 240 volt 40 amp breaker so when I get an EV able to charge faster I am good up to 40 amps. I have 3 phase grid passing our house but only a shingle phase is tapped using one transformer.
Not "good up to to 40 amps". The 100% duty cycle is limited to 80% of the face value on your circuit breaker. 50A breaker is necessary for a 40A charge rate. 32A is the most you can draw from your 40A circuit.