Methodology for Assessment of Alternative Hybrid Electric Vehicle Powertrain System Architectures

Authors Abstract
Content
Hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) systems offer significant improvements in vehicle fuel economy and reductions in vehicle generated greenhouse gas emissions. The widely accepted power-split HEV system configuration couples together an internal combustion engine with two electric machines (a motor and a generator) through a planetary gear set. This paper describes a methodology for analysis and optimization of alternative HEV power-split configurations defined by alternative connections between power sources and transaxle. The alternative configurations are identified by a matrix of kinematic equations for connected power sources. Based on the universal kinematic matrix, a generic method for automatically formulating dynamic models is developed. Screening and optimization of alternative configurations involves verification of a set of design requirements which reflect: vehicle continuous operation, e.g. grade test; and vehicle dynamic operation such as acceleration and drivability. Only the former are consider in this paper. The method automatically defines a design parameter space for each configuration which eventually would allow configuration evaluation and optimization, e.g. sizing of power sources or optimization of transaxle gear ratios.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2012-01-1010
Pages
9
Citation
Zaremba, A., Soto, C., and Jennings, M., "Methodology for Assessment of Alternative Hybrid Electric Vehicle Powertrain System Architectures," SAE Int. J. Alt. Power. 1(1):240-248, 2012, https://doi.org/10.4271/2012-01-1010.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 16, 2012
Product Code
2012-01-1010
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English