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Technical Paper

Challenges of Engine Starts and Drivability in a Parallel Hybrid-Electric System

2004-03-08
2004-01-0063
The concept of the Modular Hybrid Transmission (MHT) is to use a production transmission design with modifications to create a new low investment cost parallel hybrid-electric powertrain. In the MHT system to be discussed, the torque converter has been replaced with a 40-kilowatt electric induction machine, which is coupled to a 300 volt - 3.6 Ah Lithium-Ion battery in a 1450 kg vehicle. Also, an added wet clutch system allows the engine to be disconnected from the electric machine enabling “electric only” driving. The drivability problems occur when the driver's desire to accelerate changes quickly and the engine is still shut down. This situation can occur both from rest and while already moving.
Technical Paper

Impacts of WLTP Test Procedure on Fuel Consumption Estimation of Common Electrified Powertrains

2019-04-02
2019-01-0306
The new European test procedure, called the worldwide harmonized light vehicle test procedure (WLTP), deviates in some details from the current NEDC-based test which will have an impact on the determination of the official EU fuel consumption values for the new vehicles. The adaptation to the WLTP faces automakers with new challenges for meeting the stringent EU fuel consumption and CO2 emissions standards. This paper investigates the main changes that the new test implies to a mid-size sedan electrified vehicle design and quantifies their impact on the vehicles fuel economy. Three common electrified powertrain architectures including series, parallel P2, and powersplit are studied. A Pontryagin’s Minimum Principle (PMP) optimization-based energy management control strategy is developed to evaluate the energy consumption of the electrified vehicles in both charge-depleting (CD) and charge-sustaining (CS) modes.
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