MPC-Based Energy Management of a Parallel Hybrid Electric Vehicle Using Terrain Information

Author(s):  
Mohamed Wahba ◽  
Sean Brennan

A parallel hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) combines the power produced by electric machines and a combustion engine to enable improved fuel economy. Optimization of the power-split algorithm managing both torque sources can be readily achieved offline, but online implementation results often show great deviation from expected fuel economy due to traffic, hills, and similar effects that are not easily modeled. Of these external influences, the road grade for a travel route is potentially known a priori given a set destination choice from the driver. To examine whether grade information can improve the performance of a hybrid powertrain controller, we first formulate the vehicle model as a low-order dynamic model, recognizing that the primary dynamics of the energy system are slow. A model predictive control (MPC) strategy utilizing the terrain data is then developed to obtain a time-varying power split between the combustion engine and the electrical machine. Simulation results of the HEV model over multiple standard drive cycles, with different terrain profiles and different cost functions, are presented. Testing of the MPC performance compared to Argonne National Lab’s powertrain simulation software Autonomie shows that the MPC strategy utilizing terrain data gives an improvement of up to 2.2% in fuel economy with respect to the same controller without terrain information, on the same route.

2018 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 315-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Denis ◽  
Maxime R. Dubois ◽  
Joao Pedro F. Trovao ◽  
Alain Desrochers

2010 ◽  
Vol 108-111 ◽  
pp. 613-618
Author(s):  
Wei Zheng ◽  
Qian Fan Zhang ◽  
Shu Mei Cui

According to the Parallel Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV) demands on powertrain systems, the dynamic models of PHEV are built in this paper. Base on the analysis of dynamical characteristics of both internal combustion engine (ICE) and electric machine (EM), the dynamic ability and fuel economy performance of PHEV is presented. The paper focuses on the parametric design of powertrain on vehicle performance, which provided the theoretical foundation for PHEV design. The paper also puts forward the control strategy of PHEV during the operating modes switching, which aims to solve the problem of the power distribution between the ICE and electric motor, which can effectively resolve process control problems of the complex PHEV system. By employing the dynamic model and performing MATLAB simulation, the results of simulation are given, which demonstrate that the PHEV improve performance well.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Volkan Sezer ◽  
Ismail Meriç Can Uygan ◽  
Ahu Ece Hartavi ◽  
Levent Güvenç ◽  
Tankut Acarman ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 496-500 ◽  
pp. 1231-1234
Author(s):  
Ding Jian Huang

A series-parallel hybrid electric vehicle and its controller are more complicated than conventional vehicle,even a series or parallel hybrid electric vehicle. The HEV test platform is built up to get the engine fuel consumption map.The model of a series-parallel hybrid electric vehicle is established on the platform of the professional simulation software CRUISE,and the controller of the HEV is builded on MATLAB/Simulink.In the end,the results of co-simulation and vehicle experiment verify the validity and feasibility of this method.


Author(s):  
Richik Ray

Abstract: In this paper, a MATLAB based Simulink model of a Series-Parallel Hybrid Electric Vehicle is presented. With the advent of Industry 4.0, the usage of Big Data, Machine Learning, Internet of Things, Artificial Intelligence, and similar groundbreaking domains of technology have usurped manual supervision in industrial as well as personal scenarios. This is aided by the drastic shift from orthodox and conventional Internal Combustion Engine based vehicles fuelled by fossil fuels in the order of petrol, diesel, etc., to fully functional electric vehicles developed by renowned companies, for example Tesla. Alongside 100% electric vehicles are hybrid vehicles that function on a system based on the integration of the conventional ICE and the modern Electric Propulsion System, which is referred to as the Hybrid Vehicle Drivetrain. Designs for modern HEVs and EVs are developed on computer software where simulations are run and all the essential parameters for the vehicle’s performance and sustainability are run and observed. This paper is articulated to discuss the parameters of a series-parallel HEV through an indepth MATLAB Simulink design, and further the observations are presented. Keywords: ICE (Internal Combustion Engine), HEV (Hybrid Electric Vehicle), Drivetrain, MATLAB, Simulink, PSD (Power Split Device), Vehicle Dynamics, SOC (State-of-Charge)


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