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Technical Paper

Road to Virtual Tuning: New Physical Lump Model and Test Protocol to Support Damper Tuning in Hyundai Motor Europe Technical Center

2019-04-02
2019-01-0855
Vehicle dynamics is a fundamental part of vehicle performance. It combines functional requirements (i.e. road safety) with emotional content (“fun to drive”, “comfort”): this balance is what characterizes the car manufacturer (OEM) driving DNA. To reach the customer requirements on Ride & Handling, integration of CAE and testing is mandatory. Beside of cutting costs and time, simulation helps to break down vehicle requirements to component level. On chassis, the damper is the most important component, contributing to define the character of the vehicle, and it is defined late, during tuning, mainly by experienced drivers. Usually 1D lookup tables Force vs. Velocity, generated from tests like the standard VDA, are not able to describe the full behavior of the damper: different dampers display the same Force vs. Velocity curve but they can give different feeling to the driver.
Technical Paper

Performance Optimization for the XAM Hybrid Electric Vehicle Prototype

2012-04-16
2012-01-0773
Given the ever-increasing concern about environmental issues, the automotive industry is focusing on the development of innovative technologies that allow reduction of gas emissions and fuel consumption. Over the last few years, Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEV) and Fuel Cell Vehicles have been developed as the most promising alternative solutions for many car manufacturers. Although fuel cells are considered as the best technology to have zero emission, the impact on infrastructure for a large-scale deployment is not yet solved. For this reason, HEV represent a valid shorter-term alternative that guarantees drastic emissions reduction and reduced fuel consumption with a much lower infrastructural impact. This paper reports the results obtained by the optimization of the emissions and fuel performances of a hybrid electric city vehicle for urban transportation named XAM (eXtreme Automotive Mobility). In order to optimize these performances, a 1D model of the vehicle has been created.
Technical Paper

Human-Driving Highway Overtake and Its Perceived Comfort: Correlational Study Using Data Fusion

2020-04-14
2020-01-1036
As an era of autonomous driving approaches, it is necessary to translate handling comfort - currently a responsibility of human drivers - to a vehicle imbedded algorithm. Therefore, it is imperative to understand the relationship between perceived driving comfort and human driving behaviour. This paper develops a methodology able to generate the information necessary to study how this relationship is expressed in highway overtakes. To achieve this goal, the approach revolved around the implementation of sensor Data Fusion, by processing data from CAN, camera and LIDAR from experimental tests. A myriad of variables was available, requiring individuating the key-information and parameters for recognition, classification and understanding of the manoeuvres. The paper presents the methodology and the role each sensor plays, by expanding on three main steps: Data segregation and parameter selection; Manoeuvre detection and processing; Manoeuvre classification and database generation.
Journal Article

Design and Modelling of the Powertrain of a Hybrid Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle

2021-04-06
2021-01-0734
This paper presents a Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle (FCEV) powertrain development and optimization, aiming to minimize hydrogen consumption. The vehicle is a prototype that run at the Shell Eco-marathon race and its powertrain is composed by a PEM fuel cell, supercapacitors and a DC electric motor. The supercapacitors serve as an energy buffer to satisfy the load peaks requested by the electric motor, allowing a smoother (and closer to a stationary application) working condition for the fuel cell. Thus, the fuel cell can achieve higher efficiency rates and the fuel consumption is minimized. Several models of the powertrain were developed using MATLAB-Simulink and then experimentally validated in laboratory and on the track. The proposed models allow to evaluate two main arrangements between fuel cell and supercapacitors: 1) through a DC/DC converter that sets the FC current to a desired value; 2) using a direct parallel connection between fuel cell and supercapacitors.
Technical Paper

Customer Oriented Vehicle Dynamics Assessment for Autonomous Driving in Highway

2019-04-02
2019-01-1020
Autonomous Driving is one of the main subjects of academic research and one important trend in the automotive industry. With the advent of self-driving vehicles, the interest around trajectory planning raises, in particular when a customer-oriented analysis is performed, since more and more the carmakers will have to pay attention to the handling comfort. With that in mind, an experimental approach is proposed to assess the main characteristics of human driving and gain knowledge to enhance quality of autonomous vehicles. Focusing on overtaking maneuvers in a highway environment, four comfort indicators are proposed aiming to capture the key aspects of the chosen paths of a heterogeneous cohort. The analysis of the distribution of these indicators (peak to peak lateral acceleration, RMS lateral acceleration, Smoothness and Jerk) allowed the definition of a human drive profile.
Journal Article

CFD Simulation and Modelling of a Battery Thermal Management System: Comparison between Indirect and Immersion Cooling

2023-04-11
2023-01-0514
Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) and Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEVs) are becoming relevant in the transportation sector, and it is therefore of utmost importance to find a solution to allow batteries to work safely and in a correct temperature range in which performance degradation and/or thermal runaway do not occur. For this purpose, a Battery Thermal Management System (BTMS) is required to ensure the correct operation of the battery pack. The design and control of an efficient BTMS is a complex task, in which multiple technical fields are involved. The paper mainly focuses on the thermal problems affecting the BTMS and sets two main goals: 1) to provide a comparison of two possible BTMS solutions, analyzing constraints and thermal performance for the design task; 2) to present a battery thermal 1D model able to describe the battery module behavior in real-time application to be implemented in a BMS control.
Technical Paper

CFD Analysis of Fuel Cell Humidification System for Automotive Application

2023-04-11
2023-01-0493
Fuel cells are considered one of the promising technologies as possible replacement of Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) for the transportation sector due to their high efficiency, ultra-low (or zero) emissions and for the higher drive range. The Membrane Electrode Assembly (MEA) is what mainly influences the Fuel Cell FC performance, durability, and cost. In PEMFC the proton conductivity of the membrane is a function of the humidification level of the FC membrane, hence the importance of keeping the membrane properly humidified to achieve the best possible fuel cell performance. To have the optimal water content inside the fuel cell’s membrane several strategies could be adopted, dealing with the use of external device (such as membrane humidifier) or to adopt an optimal set of parameters (gas flow rate and temperature for example) to use the water produced at fuel cell cathode as humidity source. The aim of this paper is to study the behavior of a FC vehicle humidification system.
Technical Paper

3DOF Vehicle Dynamics Model for Fuel Consumption Estimation

2024-04-09
2024-01-2757
The dynamic model is built in Siemens Simcenter Amesim platform and simulates the performances on track of JUNO, a low energy demanding Urban Concept vehicle to take part in the Shell Eco-Marathon competition, in which the goal is to achieve the lowest fuel consumption in covering some laps of a racetrack, with limitations on the maximum race time. The model starts with the longitudinal dynamics, analysing all the factors that characterize the vehicle’s forward resistance, like aerodynamic forces, altimetry changes and rolling resistance. To improve the correlation between simulation and track performances, the model has been updated with the implementation of a Single-Track Model, including vehicle rotation around its roll axis, and a 3D representation of the racetrack, with an automatic trajectory following control implemented. This is crucial to characterise the vehicle’s lateral dynamics, which cannot be neglected in simulating its performances on track.
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