|
Aircraft Engines
Air Intake
Air Engine
Air-Cooled Engine
Air-fuel Ratio
Automobile Engines
Boat Motors
Diesel Engine
Engines
Locomotive Engines
Motorcycle Engines
Piston Engines
Rocket Engines
Steam Engines
Hit & Miss Engine
Hybrid Electric Vehicle
Hybrid Vehicle
Internal Combustion Engine
Nitro Engine
Rand Cam Engine
Six Stroke Engine
Wankel Engine
|
Hybrid Electric
Vehicles
Regular hybrid electric
vehicles (HEV) most commonly use an internal combustion engine (ICE)
and electric batteries to power electric motors. Modern mass produced
hybrid electric vehicles prolong the charge on their batteries by capturing
kinetic energy via regenerative braking, and some HEVs can use the combustion
engine to generate electricity by spinning an electrical generator (often
a motor-generator) to either recharge the battery or directly feed power
to an electric motor that drives the vehicle.
A hybrid electric vehicle is a vehicle which combines a conventional
propulsion system with an on-board rechargeable energy storage system
(RESS) to achieve better fuel economy than a conventional vehicle without
being hampered by range from a charging unit like a battery electric
vehicle, which uses batteries charged by an external source. The different
propulsion power systems may have common subsystems or components.
Many hybrid electric vehicles
reduce idle emissions by shutting down the ICE at idle and restarting
it when needed. An HEV's engine is smaller and may be run at various
speeds, providing more efficiency.
Hybrid electric vehicles
became widely available to the public in the 1990s with the introduction
of the Honda Insight and Toyota Prius. Hybrid electric vehicles are
viewed by some automakers as a core segment of the next future automotive
market. In an article for the July-August 2007 issue of THE FUTURIST
magazine titled "Energy Diversity as a Business Imperative", including
plug-in hybrid vehicles. GM vice president for environment and energy
Elizabeth Lowery is quoted as saying, "Today, we are embracing multiple
energy sources because there is no single answer available for the mass
market…"
The variety of hybrid electric
designs can be differentiated by the structure of the hybrid vehicle
drivetrain, the fuel type and the mode of operation.
In 2007, several manufacturers have announced that vehicles will use
aspects of hybrid electric technology to reduce fuel consumption without
the use of the hybrid drivetrain. Regenerative braking can be used to
recapture energy and stored to power electrical accessories, such as
air conditioning. Shutting down the engine at idle can also be used
to reduce fuel consumption and reduce emissions without the addition
of a hybrid drivetrain. In both cases, some of the advantages of hybrid
electric technology are gained while additional cost and weight may
be limited to the addition of larger batteries and starter motors. There
is no standard terminology for such vehicles, although they may be termed
mild hybrids.
The 2000s saw development
of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), which can be recharged
from the electrical power grid and do not require conventional fuel
for short trips. The Renault Kangoo was the first production model of
this design, released in France in 2003.
Gasoline engines are used in most hybrid electric designs, and will
likely remain dominant for the foreseeable future. While petroleum-derived
gasoline is the primary fuel, it is possible to mix in varying levels
of ethanol created from renewable energy sources. Like most modern ICE-powered
vehicles, HEVs can typically use up to about 15% bioethanol. Manufacturers
may move to flexible fuel engines, which would increase allowable ratios,
but no plans are in place at present.
Diesel-electric HEVs use
a diesel engine for power generation. Diesels have advantages when delivering
constant power for long periods of time, suffering less wear while operating
at higher efficiency. The diesel engine's high torque, combined with
hybrid technology, may offer substantially improved mileage. Most diesel
vehicles can use 100% pure biofuels (biodiesel), so they can use but
do not need petroleum at all for fuel (although mixes of biofuel and
petroleum are more common, and petroleum may be needed for lubrication).
If diesel-electric HEVs were in use, this benefit would likely also
apply. Diesel-electric hybrid drivetrains have begun to appear in commercial
vehicles (particularly buses); as of 2007, no light duty diesel-electric
hybrid passenger cars are currently available, although prototypes exist.
Peugeot is expected to produce a diesel-electric hybrid version of its
308 in late 2008 for the European market.
PSA Peugeot Citroën has
unveiled two demonstrator vehicles featuring a diesel-electric hybrid
drivetrain: the Peugeot 307, Citroën C4 Hybride HDi and Citroën C-Cactus.
Volkswagen made a prototype diesel-electric hybrid car that achieved
2 L/100 km (118 mpg–U.S. / 141 mpg–imp) fuel economy, but has yet to
sell a hybrid vehicle. General Motors has been testing the Opel Astra
Diesel Hybrid. There have been no concrete dates suggested for these
vehicles, but press statements have suggested production vehicles would
not appear before 2009.
Robert Bosch GmbH is supplying hybrid diesel-electric technology to
diverse automakers and models, including the Peugeot 308.
So far, production diesel-electric engines have mostly just appeared
in mass transit buses.
In some cases, manufacturers are producing HEVs that use the added energy
provided by the hybrid systems to give vehicles a power boost, rather
than significantly improved fuel efficiency compared to their traditional
counterparts.
The trade-off between added performance and improved fuel efficiency
is partly controlled by the software within the hybrid system and partly
the result of engine, battery and motor sizing. In the future, manufacturers
may provide HEV owners with the ability to partially control this balance
(fuel efficiency vs. added performance) as they wish, through a user-controlled
setting. Toyota announced in January, 2006 that it was considering a
"high-efficiency" button.
One can buy a stock hybrid
or convert a stock petroleum car to a hybrid electric vehicle using
an aftermarket hybrid kit.
Benefits of the hybrid electric design include:
Current HEVs reduce petroleum consumption (compared to otherwise similar
conventional vehicles) primarily by using three mechanisms:
a) Reducing wasted energy during idle/low output, generally by turning
the ICE off;
b) Recapturing waste energy (i.e. regenerative braking);
c) Reducing the size and power of the ICE engine, and hence inefficiencies
from under-utilization, by using the added power from the electric motor
to compensate for the loss in peak power output from the smaller ICE.
Any combination of these
three primary hybrid advantages may be used in different vehicles to
realize different fuel usage, power, emissions, weight and cost profiles.
The ICE in an HEV can be smaller, lighter, and more efficient than the
one in a conventional vehicle, because the combustion engine can be
sized for slightly above average power demand rather than peak power
demand. The drive system in a vehicle is required to operate over a
range of speed and power, but an ICE has its highest efficiency is in
a narrow range of operation, making conventional vehicles inefficient.
In contrast, in most HEV
designs, the ICE operates closer to its range of highest efficiency
more of the time. The power curve of electric motors is better suited
to variable speeds and can provide substantially greater torque at low
speeds compared with internal-combustion engines. The greater fuel economy
of HEVs has implication for reduced petroleum consumption and vehicle
air pollution emissions worldwide
Reduced wear on the gasoline engine, particularly from idling with no
load. Reduced wear on brakes from the regenerative braking system use.
There's no definitive word on replacement costs of the batteries because
they are almost never replaced. According to Toyota, since the Prius
first went on sale in 2000, they have not replaced a single battery
for wear and tear. (2007)
Reduced noise emissions
resulting from substantial use of the electric motor at idling and low
speeds, leading to roadway noise reduction, in comparison to conventional
gasoline or diesel powered engine vehicles, resulting in beneficial
noise health effects (although road noise from tires and wind, the loudest
noises at highway speeds from the interior of most vehicles, are not
affected by the hybrid design alone).
Note, however, that this is not always an advantage; for example, people
who are blind or visually-impaired, and who rely on vehicle-noise while
crossing streets, find it more difficult to do safely. Reduced air pollution
emissions due to lower fuel consumption, leading to improved human health
with regard to respiratory and other illness. Pollution reduction in
urban environments may be particularly significant due to elimination
of idle-at-rest.
|
|