This course explores the design and performance of battery technologies used in today’s battery-electric vehicles. It focuses on the skills required to define a battery pack design, how battery packs are manufactured, and tests required before entering the market. Participants will leave the course equipped with tools to understand vehicle battery specifications and be able to extract the useful information from the large volume of electric vehicle content published daily. It also defines and analyzes fundamentals of battery operation and performance requirements for HEV, PHEV, EREV and full electric vehicle applications.
Fossil fuels such as natural gas used in engines still play the most important role worldwide despite such measures as the German energy transition which however is also exacerbating climate change as a result of carbon dioxide emissions. One way of reducing carbon dioxide emissions is the choice of energy sources and with it a more favourable chemical composition. Natural gas, for instance, which consist mainly of methane, has the highest hydrogen to carbon ratio of all hydrocarbons, which means that carbon dioxide emissions can be reduced by up to 35% when replacing diesel with natural gas. Although natural gas engines show an overall low CO2 and pollutant emissions level, methane slip due to incomplete combustion occurs, causing methane emissions with a more than 20 higher global warming potential than CO2.
The global transportation industry is mandated to deliver significant reductions in Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions within the upcoming decades. The road freight sector in particular faces formidable challenges in terms of emission reduction, while maintaining/improving the performance of the current vehicles. In Europe this transition is being driven in part by specific CO2 legislation for heavy-duty vehicles (HDVs) and penalties for Original Equipment Manufacturers who miss these targets, while in the US these ambitions have been embedded within the EPA regulations. Europe currently has targets for CO2 reduction of 15% by 2025 and 30% by 2030 for new HDVs, likely increasing to 45% by 2030 and 90% by 2040. These targets have been set relative to the fleet average for the industry by truck category and are evaluated using the Vehicle Energy Consumption Calculation Tool (VECTO) to determine CO2 emissions for each unique vehicle configuration.
The objective of this study is to investigate the potential of a sustainable fuel composed of ethanol and lignin for marine engines. Lignin is the second most abundant biomass after cellulose, produced i.e. from the pulp-and-paper industries. Lignin has a higher heating value (HHV) of 23.2 – 25.6 MJ/kg but is difficult to exploit efficiently because it is a stable solid material and often ends up as waste. combining lignin and alcohol to a liquid fuel has a huge interest, and is mainly for marine engines as they are designed to tolerate a wide range of fuels. In this study, lignin-fuel with 44 wt% lignin and 50 wt% of ethanol was experimentally evaluated by using an extensively modified small-bore compression ignition (CI) engine. The technical challenges and approach to applying this kind of lignin-fuel to engines are presented.
In pursuing sustainable automotive technologies, exploring alternative fuels for hybrid vehicles is crucial in reducing environmental impact and aligning with global carbon emission reduction goals. This work compares methanol and naphtha as potential suitable alternative fuels for running in a battery-driven light-duty hybrid vehicle by comparing their performance with the diesel baseline engine. This work employs a 0-D vehicle simulation model within the GT-Power suite to replicate vehicle dynamics under the Worldwide Harmonized Light Vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC). The vehicle choice enables the assessment of a delivery application scenario using distinct payload capacities: 0%, 25%, 50%, and 100%. The model is fed with engine maps derived from previous experimental work conducted in the same engine, in which a full calibration was obtained that ensures the engine's operability in a wide region of rotational speed and loads.
The current work presents the results of an investigation on the impact of renewable fuels on the combustion and emissions of a turbocharged compression-ignition internal combustion engine. An experimental study was undertaken and the engine settings were not modified to account for the fuel's chemical and physical properties, to analyze the performance of the fuel as a potential drop-in alternative fuel. Three fuels were tested: mineral diesel, a blend of it with waste cooking oil biodiesel and a hydrogenated diesel. The analysis of the emissions at engine exhaust highlights that hydrogenated fuel allows to reduce CO, total hydrocarbon emissions, particulate matter and NOx.
In response to global climate change, there is a widespread push to reduce carbon emissions in the transportation sector. For the difficult to decarbonize heavy-duty (HD) vehicle sector, lower carbon intensity fuels can offer a low-cost, near-term solution for CO2 reduction. The use of natural gas can provide such an alternative for HD vehicles while the increasing availability of renewable natural gas affords the opportunity for much deeper reductions in net-CO2 emissions. With this in consideration, the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory launched the Natural Gas Vehicle Research and Development Project to stimulate advancements in technology and availability of natural gas vehicles. As part of this program, Southwest Research Institute developed a hybrid-electric medium-HD vehicle (class 6) to demonstrate a substantial CO2 reduction over the baseline diesel vehicle and ultra-low NOx emissions.
Heavy duty truck engines are quite difficult to electrify, due to the large amount of energy required on-board, in order to achieve a range comparable to that of diesels. This paper considers a commercial 6-cylinder engine with a displacement of 12.8 L, developed in two different versions. As a standard diesel, the engine is able to deliver more than 420 kW at 1800 rpm, whereas in the CNG configuration the maximum power output is 330 kW at 1800 rpm. Maintaining the same combustion chamber design of the last version, a theoretical study is carried out in order to run the engine on Hydrogen, compressed at 700 bar. The study is based on GT-Power simulations, adopting a predictive combustion model, calibrated with experimental results. The study shows that the implementation of a combustion system running on lean mixtures of Hydrogen, permits to cancel the emissions of CO2, while maintaining the same power output of the CNG engine.
The concerns surrounding climate change necessitate implementing sustainability policies that permeate everyday mobility. The EU's Fit for 55 package, aiming at achieving carbon neutrality by 2035, proposes a ban on fuels with positive CO2 emissions, phasing out ICEs. However, this approach, when considered in the context of European mobility habits, appears to be much less than ideal. At urban level the electric option is attractive, locally unpolluting, offering a greater independence in terms of source and higher tank-to-wheel (TTW) efficiency - not necessarily true along the life cycle (LCA): however, these outcomes are pursuable with other solutions. This study presents a novel approach for the homologation driving cycle split into two phases, aiding to shape a better match between supply and demand on real-world data.
The paper presents a theoretical framework for the detection and first-level preliminary identification of potential defects on aero-structure components while employing ultrasonic guided wave based structural health monitoring strategies, systems and tools. In particular, we focus our study on ground inspection using laser-Doppler scan of surface velocity field, which can also be partly reconstructed or monitored using point sensors and actuators on-board structurally integrated. Using direct wave field data, we first question the detectability of potential defects of unknown location, size, and detailed features. Defects could be manufacturing defects or variations, which may be acceptable from design and qualification standpoint; however, those may cause significant background signal artifacts in differentiating structure progressive damage or sudden failure like impact-induced damage and fracture.
The purpose of the Air Generation System is to provide a constant supply of conditioned fresh air to meet the necessary oxygen availability and to prevent carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations for the occupants in an aircraft. The engine bleed energy or electrical load energy consumed towards this circumstance accounts to be approx. 5% of total fuel burn and in turn, contributes to the global emissions of greenhouse gases. This paper studies the improvement areas of the present conventional system such as fuel burn consumption associated with an aircraft environmental control system (ECS) depending on, the amount of bleed and ram air usage, electric power consumption. Improved systems for propulsion, power generation, sustainability, hybridization, and environmental control can be desirable for an aircraft.
The evaluation of aircraft characteristics through flight test maneuvers is fundamental to aviation safety and understanding flight attributes. This research project proposes a comprehensive methodology to detect and analyze aircraft maneuvers using full flight data, combining signal processing and machine learning techniques. Leveraging the Wavelet Transform, we unveil intricate temporal details within flight data, uncovering critical time-frequency insights essential for aviation safety. The integration of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) models enhances our ability to capture temporal dependencies, surpassing the capabilities of machine learning in isolation. These extracted maneuvers not only aid in safety but also find practical applications in system identification, air-data calibration, and performance analysis, significantly reducing pre-processing time for analysts.