Energy Management of Hydrogen Hybrid Electric Vehicles -- A Potential Study
The hydrogen combustion engine (H$_2$ICE) is known to be able to burn H$_2$ under ultra-lean conditions, while producing no CO$_2$ emissions and extremely low engine-out NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions. Immediate goals, as for instance the upcoming EURO 7 NO$_x$ limitations, can be reached more easil...
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Zusammenfassung: | The hydrogen combustion engine (H$_2$ICE) is known to be able to burn H$_2$
under ultra-lean conditions, while producing no CO$_2$ emissions and extremely
low engine-out NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions. Immediate goals, as for instance
the upcoming EURO 7 NO$_x$ limitations, can be reached more easily as extremely
low engine-out NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions facilitate the reduction of the
overall tailpipe NO$_x^{\mathrm{tp}}$ emissions. In this work, the feasibility
of achieving consistent reductions in NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions through
the implementation of electric hybridization of an H$_2$ICE-equipped passenger
car (H$_2$-HEV), combined with a dedicated energy management strategy (EMS) is
discussed. In particular, the mixed H$_2$-HEV architecture is investigated and
compared to a series H$_2$-HEV, a parallel H$_2$-HEV, and a base H$_2$-vehicle,
which is only equipped with an H$_2$ICE. For hybrid vehicles, a low H$_2$
consumption and low NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions are conflicting objectives,
the trade-off of which depends on the EMS and can be represented as a Pareto
front. Overall, through the utilization of a dedicated energy management
calibration, the mixed H$_2$-HEV demonstrates the capability to consistently
achieve extremely low engine-out NO$_x^{\mathrm{eo}}$ emissions. For a broad
range of driving missions, the mixed H$_2$-HEV is able to decrease the
engine-out NO$_\mathrm{x}^\mathrm{eo}$ emissions by more than 90%, while, at
the same time, the H$_2$ consumption is decreased by over 16%, compared to a
comparable non-hybridized H$_2$-vehicle. These significant emission reductions
are possible without having to modify the exhaust-gas aftertreatment system, or
the optimization of any of the individual drivetrain components, but solely by
setting the EMS calibration accordingly. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2309.09804 |