56 research outputs found

    Modelling and control of hybrid electric vehicles (a comprehensive review)

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    The gradual decline in global oil reserves and presence of ever so stringent emissions rules around the world, have created an urgent need for the production of automobiles with improved fuel economy. HEVs (hybrid electric vehicles) have proved a viable option to guarantying improved fuel economy and reduced emissions.The fuel consumption benefits which can be realised when utilising HEV architecture are dependent on how much braking energy is regenerated, and how well the regenerated energy is utilized. The challenge in developing an HEV control strategy lies in the satisfaction of often conflicting control constraints involving fuel consumption, emissions and driveability without over-depleting the battery state of charge at the end of the defined driving cycle.To this effect, a number of power management strategies have been proposed in literature. This paper presents a comprehensive review of these literatures, focusing primarily on contributions in the aspect of parallel hybrid electric vehicle modelling and control. As part of this treatise, exploitable research gaps are also identified. This paper prides itself as a comprehensive reference for researchers in the field of hybrid electric vehicle development, control and optimization

    Modelling and control of hybrid electric vehicles (a comprehensive review)

    Get PDF
    The gradual decline in global oil reserves and presence of ever so stringent emissions rules around the world, have created an urgent need for the production of automobiles with improved fuel economy. HEVs (hybrid electric vehicles) have proved a viable option to guarantying improved fuel economy and reduced emissions.The fuel consumption benefits which can be realised when utilising HEV architecture are dependent on how much braking energy is regenerated, and how well the regenerated energy is utilized. The challenge in developing an HEV control strategy lies in the satisfaction of often conflicting control constraints involving fuel consumption, emissions and driveability without over-depleting the battery state of charge at the end of the defined driving cycle.To this effect, a number of power management strategies have been proposed in literature. This paper presents a comprehensive review of these literatures, focusing primarily on contributions in the aspect of parallel hybrid electric vehicle modelling and control. As part of this treatise, exploitable research gaps are also identified. This paper prides itself as a comprehensive reference for researchers in the field of hybrid electric vehicle development, control and optimization

    Analyzing the Improvements of Energy Management Systems for Hybrid Electric Vehicles Using a Systematic Literature Review: How Far Are These Controls from Rule-Based Controls Used in Commercial Vehicles?

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    Featured Application This work is useful for researchers interested in the study of energy management systems for hybrid electric vehicles. In addition, it is interesting for institutions related to the market of this type of vehicle. The hybridization of vehicles is a viable step toward overcoming the challenge of the reduction of emissions related to road transport all over the world. To take advantage of the emission reduction potential of hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), the appropriate design of their energy management systems (EMSs) to control the power flow between the engine and the battery is essential. This work presents a systematic literature review (SLR) of the more recent works that developed EMSs for HEVs. The review is carried out subject to the following idea: although the development of novel EMSs that seek the optimum performance of HEVs is booming, in the real world, HEVs continue to rely on well-known rule-based (RB) strategies. The contribution of this work is to present a quantitative comparison of the works selected. Since several studies do not provide results of their models against commercial RB strategies, it is proposed, as another contribution, to complete their results using simulations. From these results, it is concluded that the improvement of the analyzed EMSs ranges roughly between 5% and 10% with regard to commercial RB EMSs; in comparison to the optimum, the analyzed EMSs are nearer to the optimum than commercial RB EMSs

    Energy management strategies for fuel cell vehicles: A comprehensive review of the latest progress in modeling, strategies, and future prospects

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    Fuel cell vehicles (FCVs) are considered a promising solution for reducing emissions caused by the transportation sector. An energy management strategy (EMS) is undeniably essential in increasing hydrogen economy, component lifetime, and driving range. While the existing EMSs provide a range of performance levels, they suffer from significant shortcomings in robustness, durability, and adaptability, which prohibit the FCV from reaching its full potential in the vehicle industry. After introducing the fundamental EMS problem, this review article provides a detailed description of the FCV powertrain system modeling, including typical modeling, degradation modeling, and thermal modeling, for designing an EMS. Subsequently, an in-depth analysis of various EMS evolutions, including rule-based and optimization-based, is carried out, along with a thorough review of the recent advances. Unlike similar studies, this paper mainly highlights the significance of the latest contributions, such as advanced control theories, optimization algorithms, artificial intelligence (AI), and multi-stack fuel cell systems (MFCSs). Afterward, the verification methods of EMSs are classified and summarized. Ultimately, this work illuminates future research directions and prospects from multi-disciplinary standpoints for the first time. The overarching goal of this work is to stimulate more innovative thoughts and solutions for improving the operational performance, efficiency, and safety of FCV powertrains

    Design of Energy Management Strategies for a Battery-Ultracapacitor Electric Vehicle

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    The battery pack is the most expensive component in electric vehicles. Electric vehicles are prone to accelerated battery degradation due to the high charging/discharging cycles and high peak power demand. One solution to this issue would be increasing the battery capacity to meet the high energy requests. However, increasing the battery size is not reasonable due to the high cost and volume. An alternative solution is integrating other energy storage systems into the vehicle powertrain. The additional energy storage system highlights an energy management strategy to distribute the power among onboard energy storage systems effectively. Energy management systems incorporate different strategies classified based on their computational time, implementability in real-time, and measurable performance to be optimized. This thesis considers the case study of Chevy Spark model year 2015 with a hybrid energy storage system including battery and ultracapacitor. First, an overview of diffrent energy storage systems is presented, followed by a review of different hybrid energy storage' configurations. Second, energy management strategies are categorized into three main classifications: rule-based, optimization-based, and data-based algorithms. Third, the selected vehicle model with an embedded rule-based energy management strategy is developed in MATLAB Simulink, and battery performance is validated against available real-world data. Optimal power distribution among battery and ultracapacitor is achieved through an offline global optimal algorithm in chapter 5 in a way to improve battery life. Finally, optimal results are used as a training dataset for an online data-based energy management strategy. Results prove the strategy's effectiveness by improving battery life by an average of 16% compared to the rule-based and 12% difference from the globally optimal strategy on various driving conditions. The proposed energy management strategy provides near-optimal performance while it is real-time implementable and does not need to have beforehand knowledge of driving cycles

    Robust real-time control of a parallel hybrid electric vehicle

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    Constraint-Aware and Efficiency-Aware Control of Air-Path in Fuel Cell Vehicles

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    Fuel cell technology offers the potential for clean, efficient, robust energy productionfor both stationary and mobile applications. But without fast and robust control systems, fuel cells cannot hope to maintain real-life efficiencies near enough to their theoretical potential. This work studies control and constraint management techniques to regulate a nonlinear multivariable air-path system for a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC). The control objectives are to avoid oxygen starvation, run at the maximum net efficiency, achieve fast tracking of air flow and pressure set-points, and be easy to calibrate. To operate at maximum efficiency, a set-point map is generated for air pressure at the cathode inlet. Considering that the conventional PEMFC system cannot independently control the inlet pressure using only the compressor motor, a new multivariable analysis and control scheme is formulated by considering an electronic throttle body (ETB) valve downstream of the cathode as a new degree of freedom in the control problem. Based on this new configuration of the fuel cell model, an internal model control (IMC) controller is designed with intuitive tuning parameters to simultaneously control airflow and pressure, and achieves a fast and smooth response despite strongly coupled plant dynamics. Further, a reference governor (RG) using a computationally tractable linear prediction model is included with IMC-based Multi-Input Multi-Output (MIMO) controller to satisfy the constraint on oxygen level. Compared with a Single-Input Single-Output (SISO) air-flow control approach, the proposed MIMO control approach demonstrated up to 7.36 percent lower hydrogen fuel consumption

    A comprehensive review on energy management strategies for electric vehicles considering degradation using aging models

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    Electrification in the transportation industry is becoming more important to face global warming and replace fossil fuels in the future. Among the available energy sources Li-ion battery and proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) are the most promising energy sources. Therefore, employing them in fuel cell hybrid electric vehicles (FCHEVs) to combine their advantages is one of the favorable solutions. However, they still face a major challenge residing in their aging that cause the drop of system performance. On one hand, the degradation is the result of the interaction between several aging mechanisms that react differently with various operating conditions. On the other hand, a hybrid system requires an essential energy management strategy (EMS) for fuel economy and optimal power share. At the end, this EMS has an important impact on the lifetime of sources in term of reducing or favorizing the degradation. Therefore, it is important to consider the degradation in the objectives of the designed EMS. Since the degradation is usually neglected when designing an EMS, this paper tends to review the possible methods for designing a health-conscious EMS. Hence, this paper presents a summary of the main fuel cell (FC) and Li-ion battery aging mechanisms as well as the useful degradation models for state of health estimation. In addition, the existing works that consider the degradation of on-board energy sources in their approaches for increasing their durability are classified and analysed. Remaining challenges are detailed along with a discussion and outlooks about current and future trends of health-conscious EMS. Autho
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