3,888 research outputs found
A H2 PEM fuel cell and high energy dense battery hybrid energy source for an urban electric vehicle
Electric vehicles are set to play a prominent role in addressing the energy and environmental impact of an increasing road transport population by offering a more energy efficient and less polluting drive-train alternative to conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles. Given the energy (and hence range) and performance limitations of electro-chemical battery storage systems, hybrid systems combining energy and power dense storage technologies have been proposed for vehicle applications. The paper discusses the application of a hydrogen fuel cell as a range extender for an urban electric vehicle for which the primary energy source is provided by a high energy dense battery. A review of fuel cell systems and automotive drive-train application issues are discussed, together with an overview of the battery technology. The prototype fuel cell and battery component simulation models are presented and their performance as a combined energy/power source assessed for typical urban and sub-urban driving scenario
SAW torque transducers for disturbance rejection and tracking control of multi-inertia servo-drive systems
The paper proposes a resonance ratio control (RRC) technique for the coordinated motion control of multi-inertia mechanical systems, based on the measurement of shaft torque via a SAW-based torque sensor. Furthermore, a new controller structure, RRC plus disturbance feedback is proposed, which enables the controller to be designed to independently satisfy tracking and regulation performance. A tuning method for the RRC structure is given based on the ITAE index, normalized as a function of the mechanical parameters enabling a direct performance comparison between a basic proportional and integral (PI) controller. The use of a reduced-order state observer is presented to provide a dynamic estimate of the load-side disturbance torque for a multi-inertia mechanical system, with an appraisal of the composite closed-loop dynamics. It is shown that the integrated formulation of the tuning criteria enables lower bandwidth observers to be implemented with a corresponding reduction in noise and computational load. The control structures are experimentally validated via a purpose designed test facility and demonstrate significant improvement in dynamic tracking performance, whilst additionally rejecting periodic load side disturbances, a feature previously unrealisable except by other, high-gain control schemes that impose small stability margins
Dynamical trapping and relaxation of scalar gravitational fields
We present a framework for nonlinearly coupled scalar-tensor theory of
gravity to address both inflation and core-collapse supernova problems. The
unified approach is based on a novel dynamical trapping and relaxation of
scalar gravity in highly energetic regimes. The new model provides a viable
alternative mechanism of inflation free from various issues known to affect
previous proposals. Furthermore, it could be related to observable violent
astronomical events, specifically by releasing a significant amount of
additional gravitational energy during core-collapse supernovae. A recent
experiment at CERN relevant for testing this new model is briefly outlined.Comment: 4 pages; version to appear in PL
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