Gyanesh Tiwari Govind Kumar Arpit Jain
Gyanesh Tiwari Govind Kumar Arpit Jain
Gyanesh Tiwari Govind Kumar Arpit Jain
Govind Kumar
Arpit Jain
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Content
Why fuel efficiency is important
Environmental impacts and public concerns
A short history of electric and hybrid technology
How hybrid and electric cars work
Why they are fuel efficient
Advantages and issues
Technological challenges
Next generation of green vehicles
Q&A
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Why fuel efficiency is important
World energy shortage and growing demand have caused energy crises
Source: www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook
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Why fuel efficiency is important
• Oil Reserves are
diminishing
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Why fuel efficient cars?
Global warming due to CO2 emission
Combustion (burning)
Fuel(C,H)+O2 CO2 + CO + H2O + energy(heat)
Source: www.fueleconomy.gov
US DOE 6
A short history of hybrid & electric cars
1825
Steam Engine Car, British inventor Goldsworthy
85 miles round trip took 10 hours (14 km/h)
1870
First electric car was build in Scotland
1897
The London Electric Cab Company used a 40-cell battery and 3
horsepower electric motor,
Could be driven 50 miles between charges
1898
The German Dr. Porsche, at age 23, Built the world's first front-wheel-
drive
Porsche's second car was a hybrid, using an internal combustion
engine to spin a generator that provided power to electric motors located
in the wheel hubs. On battery alone, the car could travel nearly 40 miles
Source: www.hybridcars.com/history
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A short history of hybrid & electric cars
1900
US car companies made 1,681 steam, 1,575 electric and 936
gasoline cars.
In a poll, electric was the first choice, followed by steam
1904
Henry Ford overcame the gasoline engine issues: noise, vibration,
and odor
Produced low-priced, lightweight, gas-powered vehicles
Within a few years, the Electric Vehicle Company failed
1997-99
Toyota, Audi, Honda, Ford, GM followed by other main car
manufactures introduced new generation of electric and hybrid cars
2004
The Toyota Prius II won 2004 Car of the Year Awards from Motor Trend
Magazine and the North American Auto Show.
Toyota was surprised by the demand and pumped up its production from
36,000 to 47,000 for the U.S
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Source: www.hybridcars.com/history
Where does fuel energy go in a conventional car
Source: www.fueleconomy.gov
US DOE 9
How hybrids save fuel
1. Engine is turned off at:
Stops
Lower speed (say less that 15 km/h), an electric motor drives
the car until speed reaches a certain limit, then engine kicks
in
When vehicle is stopping or going downhill, engine is turned
off, Regenerative braking is applied
2. When engine operates in an inefficient mode(e.g. at very high
or very low engine speeds), the electric motor kicks in and
assists engine. Engine is driven to its optimum operating zone
3. Engine can be made smaller, due to electric motor assistance
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1
E m(VA2 VB2 )
2
A B
• VB > V A accelerating, fuel is consumed, kinetic energy is increased
A B
• VA > V B braking, vey little fuel is consumed, kinetic energy is
reduced
energy is dissipated in the brakes as heat in conventional
cars
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E mgh
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Optimum engine operation condition
Optimum operating rang
Engine Map
BSFC [g/kWh]
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How Hybrids work
Click on the link below to see a hybrid animation
Hybrid Demo
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A hybrid System
VCU
Prius does not have
•step gears
•clutch or
•torque converter
•starter motor
•alternator
Eclectic motors
and planetary
gear system
work as a CVT
or Continuously
Variable
Transmission
Schematic diagram of Prius
www.cleangreencar.co.nz/page/prius-technical-info
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How Hybrids work
Eclectic motors
and planetary
gear system
work as a CVT
or Continuously
Variable
Transmission
Prius Hybrid
www.cleangreencar.co.nz/page/prius-technical-info 17
How Electric cars work
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Electric cars
Have comparable speed and power
Zero emission for hydro electric grids like BC 100 years old
High overall fuel efficiency, thermal power plants can
have up to 80% efficiency and lower emission
No IC engine, no transmission, no engine oil, no gearbox
fluid
Lower maintenance
Lower price
Good for inner city short trips
Simple and mature tech
Low noise
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Plug in hybrid
Plug in hybrid has advantages of the both
Chevrolet Volt
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Hybrid cars issues
Currently more expensive than conventional
Heavier than conventional, due to battery pack and electric motors
weight
Limited battery life
Expensive battery pack if you want to replace it
Safety issues, high voltage battery and fuel
Reliability, still under study,
More complex computer controlled systems
May have drivability issues
Expensive to repair
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Electric cars issues
Needs heavy duty power plug terminal (high current) everywhere:
home, parking and street with metering device
Electric energy infrastructure (generation, transmission and
distribution) must be expanded to provide extra energy for this type
of cars.
Travels short distances, inner city
Low speed
Battery charging takes time
Limited battery life
Safety issues
Need new regulatory standards and
New building electric code
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Technology challenges and opportunities
Battery capacity reduces by time, even you do not use it.
This will impact fuel economy
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Technology challenges and opportunities
Time of battery changing is long(plug in hybrid)
Batteries are heavy (100kg extra weight consumes 2L/100km more)
Batteries are expensive
Low performance in hot or cold temperatures also may damage the
battery
Very sensitive to overcharge/undercharge(Battery life reduces
dramatically)
Contain toxic heavy metals, disposal issue
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Next generation of green vehicles
• Plug in hybrids with Lithium Ion Batteries and Ultra Capacitors
• Hybrid Buses
• Hybrid trucks with compressed gas energy storage systems
• Hybrid trains
• EVs everywhere
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Fail safe systems
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