MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

26
POLITECNICO DI TORINO Master of Science in Automotive Engineering Trade-off analysis of hybrid electric powertrains Academic Tutors: Prof. Nicola Amati Students: Prof. Andrea Tonoli Stefano Di Donato Ing. Luca Castellazzi Chowdhury Foyz Ahamed Polas

Transcript of MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Page 1: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

POLITECNICO DI TORINOMaster of Science in Automotive Engineering

Trade-off analysis of hybrid electric powertrains

Academic Tutors:Prof. Nicola Amati Students:Prof. Andrea Tonoli Stefano Di DonatoIng. Luca Castellazzi Chowdhury Foyz Ahamed Polas

Page 2: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Hybrid electric vehicles

• High pollutant emissions

• Global warming

• Increase of fossil fuel price

Introduction

2/25

Tighter regulations on vehicle emissions

Page 3: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Architectures

Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEV)

Series

Power split (Series-Parallel)

Parallel

3/25

Page 4: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

4/25

Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEV)

Hybridization Ratio

Page 5: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

FrontDifferentia

l

5/25

Modelled architectures• Through The Road (TTR)

Gearbox Cl

utc

h

Fuel

Internal Combustion Engine

Electric Machine/Inverter

48V Battery

Front Wheels

RearDifferentia

l

Rear Wheels

Page 6: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Differential

6/25

Modelled architectures• Belt-driven Starter Generator (BSG)

Gearbox Cl

utc

h

Fuel

Internal Combustion Engine

Electric Machine/Inverter

48V Battery

Front Wheels

Belt Coupling

Page 7: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• Modelling and analysis of hybrid powertrains

• Energetic analysis, battery sizing

• Accessories energy consumption

• Comparison between different architectures

7/25

Objectives

Page 8: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

8/25

Vehicle DataModelled vehicle: Fiat Panda

Internal combustion engine: 1.0 TwinAir (Naturally Aspirated)• Max Power: 65CV @6250 RPM• Max Torque: 88Nm @3500 RPM

Vehicle mass: 975 Kg

Wheelbase: 2.3 m

Page 9: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Powertrain components (Pure ICE Vehicle)

9/25

Vehicle Model

Driving Cycle

Driver

Internal Combustion Engine

Clut

ch Gearbo

xDifferenti

al Wheels

Drivetrain

Ref. Speed

Actual Speed

Throttle Torque

Longitudinal Wheel Force (Fx)

Brakes

Fuel Consumption

Vehicle Dynamics

Page 10: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Fuel Consumption Evaluation

10/25

Vehicle Model

𝑝𝑚𝑒=𝑇 𝑛𝑐

10𝑉 𝑑2𝜋

- : mean effective pressure- : Instantaneous torque- : Number of revolutions per power

stroke (for a 4-stroke engine = 2),- : the displacement volume

g/CVh

g/CVh kg/J kg/s l/100km

Page 11: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

11/25

Validation of the model

Modelled vehicle Real vehicle

0-100 km/h acceleration test 15.28 s 15.7 s

Fuel Consumption comparison (NEDC) 4.4 l/100km 4.2 l/100km

Page 12: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

BSG ImplementationVehicle Model

Internal Combustion Engine Belt

Coupling

- Belt Drive System Block (BDS)Pulleys• Alternator/EM • A/C compressor• Automatic Tensioner• Crankshaft• Idle

12/25

48V Battery Electric Machine/Inverter

Modelled phenomena• Predict levels of slip in different pulley-

belt contact regions• Calculate the belt tensions for different

spans• Calculate power losses of the system 

- Electric motor

Page 13: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Battery ModelVehicle Model

13/25

𝐸=𝐸0−𝐾 ( 𝑄𝑛𝑜𝑚

𝑄𝑛𝑜𝑚−𝑄 )+ 𝐴𝑒−𝐵𝑄

𝑆𝑂𝐶 [%]=100 (1− 𝑄𝑄𝑛𝑜𝑚 )

- = no-load voltage [V]- = battery nominal voltage [V]- = polarization voltage [V] - is the actual battery charge [Ah],- is the nominal battery capacity [Ah], - is the exponential zone amplitude [V],- is the exponential zone time constant inverse [Ah-1]

Page 14: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

TTR Implementation

14/25

Vehicle Model

Electric Machine/Inverter

48V Battery

RearDifferentia

l

• The BDS system is removed from the front driveline.

• A seperate 3 phase Brushless AC Motor powers the rear axle.

• The motor can generate maximum torque of 88 Nm and peak power 30 kW.

Page 15: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• Current absorption characteristics of the Electric Motor.

15/25

Vehicle Model (TTR)

Page 16: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

16

• Modelled as a one-dimensional linear model

• = Dissipated Power

• = Thermal resistance

• = Thermal time constant

Thermal Model

𝑡

𝑇 𝐸𝑀𝑃 𝐷𝑅 h𝑡

𝜏 h𝑡

Page 17: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

17/25

Control Strategy• Control parameters

• Battrey SOC%,

• Current,

• Temperature.

• Controlled parameters• Torque provided by the ICE,

• Torque provided by the EM.

• Control Objectives

• Obtain battery energy balance,

• Regeneration of maximum brake energy,

• Safety,

• Fuel consumption reduction.

Page 18: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

18/25

Control StrategyCurrent control SOC control Temperature control

Page 19: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

19/25

Validation of the Control strategy• NEDC cycle

• Battery capacity 35Ah

• Maximum current 175 A

• Initial SOC = 70%

• = 30 km/h

Page 20: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• Simulations varying Vswitch : ∆SOC evaluation

• Fuel consumption evaluation for each capacity

(Energetic equilibrium -> ∆SOC = 0)

• Battery sizing

• Comparison between BSG and TTR configurations

20/25

Battery Sizing

Page 21: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• A part of battery energy is required by the electrified accessories,

• For example an electrified A/C compressor require a power of 1500W,

• The energy from the regenerative braking is not sufficient,

• A BSG or a conventional alternator will provide the necessary power.

21/25

Electrified AccessoriesCapacity 17.5Ah @10C

BSG Model TTR Model

Available Current 12.19 A 23.5 A

Available Power 585 W 1130 W

Capacity 17.5Ah @10C

Belted A/C Compressor

Electric A/C Compressor

Fuel Consumption

5.265 l/100km

5.072 l/100km

Page 22: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• All the simulations are repeated for the TTR architecture,

• The TTR configuration consumes 12.5% less than the BSG.

22/25

Electrified AccessoriesCapacity 17.5Ah @10C

BSG Model TTR Model

Applied torque (BSG or Alternator)

3.05 Nm 1.1 Nm

Available Power 1500 W 1500 W

Fuel consumption

5.072 l/100km

4.44 l/100km

Page 23: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Vehicle configuration BSG Model TTR Model ImprovementPure ICE 4.173 4.173

Hybrid (Battery 17.5 Ah @10C) 3.833 3.260 14.95%

Hybrid (Battery 17.5 Ah @10C)With electric A/C compressor (1500W)

5.072 4.440 12.45%

23/25

Review of the results

Page 24: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

• The TTR architecture is more efficient for electric traction and regenerative braking.

• The BSG architecture is useful to generate power for the accessories and as starter motor

• The optimal configuration can be a combination of the two architectures

24/25

Conclusions

Page 25: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

FrontDifferentia

l

25/25

Conclusions• Optimal architecture

Gearbox Cl

utc

h

Internal Combustion Engine

Electric Machine/Inverter

48V Battery

Front Wheels

RearDifferentia

l

Rear WheelsBSG Machine/Inverter

Electrified Accessorie

s

Page 26: MSc Degree Presentation_DS_CP_DEFINITIVE

Thank You for

Your Attention