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Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles

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Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles. / Xun, Qian; Liu, Yujing; Zhao, Nan.
2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC). IEEE, 2020. p. 1234-1239.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Xun, Q, Liu, Y & Zhao, N 2020, Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles. in 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC). IEEE, pp. 1234-1239, 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC), 23/06/20. https://doi.org/10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586

APA

Xun, Q., Liu, Y., & Zhao, N. (2020). Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles. In 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC) (pp. 1234-1239). IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586

Vancouver

Xun Q, Liu Y, Zhao N. Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles. In 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC). IEEE. 2020. p. 1234-1239 Epub 2020 Jun 23. doi: 10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586

Author

Xun, Qian ; Liu, Yujing ; Zhao, Nan. / Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles. 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC). IEEE, 2020. pp. 1234-1239

Bibtex

@inproceedings{0eb8a95e98b947be8c667532715744c5,
title = "Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles",
abstract = "Fuel cell electric vehicles have great superiorities in endurance mileage, charging speed and climate tolerance compared to battery electric vehicles. However, a supercapacitor or battery bank is required to maintain a fast-dynamic response, which leads to several hybridization structures for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles due to the unique characteristics of each device, and their performances are also differing. The purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for three types of powertrains: fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid, fuel cell/supercapacitor semi-active hybrid, and fuel cell/battery semi-active hybrid. Each powertrain component model is developed from the real components wherever possible, and Honda FCX Clarity fuel cell vehicle is studied as the benchmark. The powertrain energy efficiency under Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC) is analyzed and evaluated. The simulation results show that three powertrains have the same energy consumption, and fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid powertrain increases the system efficiency by 2% and 4% in propulsion and regenerative braking, respectively. By contrast, the other two powertrain topologies have similar performance in terms of energy efficiency.",
author = "Qian Xun and Yujing Liu and Nan Zhao",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781728146300",
pages = "1234--1239",
booktitle = "2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC)",
publisher = "IEEE",
note = "2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC) ; Conference date: 23-06-2020 Through 26-06-2020",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Energy efficiency comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles

AU - Xun, Qian

AU - Liu, Yujing

AU - Zhao, Nan

PY - 2020/8/7

Y1 - 2020/8/7

N2 - Fuel cell electric vehicles have great superiorities in endurance mileage, charging speed and climate tolerance compared to battery electric vehicles. However, a supercapacitor or battery bank is required to maintain a fast-dynamic response, which leads to several hybridization structures for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles due to the unique characteristics of each device, and their performances are also differing. The purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for three types of powertrains: fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid, fuel cell/supercapacitor semi-active hybrid, and fuel cell/battery semi-active hybrid. Each powertrain component model is developed from the real components wherever possible, and Honda FCX Clarity fuel cell vehicle is studied as the benchmark. The powertrain energy efficiency under Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC) is analyzed and evaluated. The simulation results show that three powertrains have the same energy consumption, and fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid powertrain increases the system efficiency by 2% and 4% in propulsion and regenerative braking, respectively. By contrast, the other two powertrain topologies have similar performance in terms of energy efficiency.

AB - Fuel cell electric vehicles have great superiorities in endurance mileage, charging speed and climate tolerance compared to battery electric vehicles. However, a supercapacitor or battery bank is required to maintain a fast-dynamic response, which leads to several hybridization structures for fuel-cell-based electric vehicles due to the unique characteristics of each device, and their performances are also differing. The purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive comparison of hybrid powertrain systems for three types of powertrains: fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid, fuel cell/supercapacitor semi-active hybrid, and fuel cell/battery semi-active hybrid. Each powertrain component model is developed from the real components wherever possible, and Honda FCX Clarity fuel cell vehicle is studied as the benchmark. The powertrain energy efficiency under Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC) is analyzed and evaluated. The simulation results show that three powertrains have the same energy consumption, and fuel cell/supercapacitor passive hybrid powertrain increases the system efficiency by 2% and 4% in propulsion and regenerative braking, respectively. By contrast, the other two powertrain topologies have similar performance in terms of energy efficiency.

U2 - 10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586

DO - 10.1109/ITEC48692.2020.9161586

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 9781728146300

SP - 1234

EP - 1239

BT - 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC)

PB - IEEE

T2 - 2020 IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference & Expo (ITEC)

Y2 - 23 June 2020 through 26 June 2020

ER -