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Technical Paper

Performance Parity Study of Electrified Class 8 Semi Trucks with Diesel Counterparts

2024-04-09
2024-01-2164
It is recognized that the heavier vehicles, the more emissions, thus the more imperative to electrify. In this study, long haul heavy-duty trucks are referred as HDTs, which are recognized as one of the hard-to-electrify vehicle segments, though the automotive industry has gained trending advantages of electrifying both light-duty cars and SUVs. Since big rigs such as Class 8 HDTs have significant road-block challenges for electrification due to the demanding long-hour work cycles in all weathers, this study focuses on quantifying those electrification challenges by taking advantage of the public data of Class 8 tractors & trailers. Tesla Semi is the research target though its vehicle spec data is sorted out with fragmentary information in the public domain. The key task is to analyze the battery capacity requirements due to environmental temperature and inherent aging over the lifespan.
Technical Paper

Comparative Studies of Drivetrain Systems for Electric Vehicles

2013-09-24
2013-01-2467
Vehicle electrification is being actively expanded into coming generations of passenger and commercial vehicles. This technology trend is helping vehicles to become more energy efficient. For electric vehicle (EV) city bus application, the system designers have been experimenting with a number of options including direct drive and multi-speed gearbox architectures. Direct drive scenario offers simplified drivetrain system, however requires a large and powerful electric motor. Multi-speed transmission system provides an opportunity to reduce motor size and optimize its operating points, but increases complexity from the architecture and controls point of view. This paper provides an overview of several common system layouts and examines their advantages and disadvantages. Vehicle simulation results are presented to compare direct drive vs. multi-speed technology from the gradeability, acceleration and energy consumption points of view.
Technical Paper

Numerical Improvement of ADVISOR for Evaluating Commercial Vehicles with Traditional Powertrain Systems

2007-10-30
2007-01-4208
ADVISOR is a flexible drivetrain analysis tool, developed in MATLAB/Simulink® to compare fuel economy and emissions performance between different drivetrain configurations. This paper reports a couple of numerical issues with application of ADVISOR 2002 to commercial vehicles with traditional powertrain systems. One instance is when ADVISOR model is set up to simulate running a heavy-duty (HD) truck with an automated manual transmission (AMT) on a demanding pickup-delivery duty cycle. The other is highlighted during an analysis of a medium-duty (MD) truck with an automatic transmission (AT) where wide-open throttle, i.e., fast acceleration is requested. These two cases have shown different numerical difficulties by using ADVISOR 2002. Based on studying the details of the models, solutions to these numerical issues are developed. The simulation results will demonstrate the effectiveness of these solutions.
Technical Paper

Simulation Study of Dual Clutch Transmission for Medium Duty Truck Applications

2005-11-01
2005-01-3590
Dual clutch based transmissions (DCT) have been developed for passenger vehicles in Europe. Compared to a single clutch based transmission (SCT), DCT eliminates torque interrupts during gear-shifting so that the vehicles can run as smooth as one using an automatic transmission (AT). Traditionally AT needs to use torque converters to transmit engine torque to drivelines. However, a torque converter is complicated and expensive, and offers lower driveline efficiency than SCT and DCT. DCT technology is a cost-effective avenue to achieve smooth shifting while taking advantage of the some beneficial features of both AT and SCT. This paper presents the results of an analysis of the application of DCT on medium duty (MD) trucks. First, we set up a 6-speed DCT with two groups of three gear ratios in correspondence to two ceramic dry clutches. Clutch dampers are included in the DCT model. For simplicity but without loss of generality, the synchronizers are not included for this study.
Technical Paper

Study of Semiactive Adaptive Control Algorithms with Magneto-Rheological Seat Suspension

2004-03-08
2004-01-1648
This paper presents a parametric study of two semiactive adaptive control algorithms through simulation: the non-model based skyhook control, and the newly developed model-based nonlinear adaptive vibration control. This study includes discussion of suspension model setup, dynamic analysis approach, and controller tuning. The simulation setup is from a heavy-duty truck seat suspension with a magneto-rheological (MR) damper. The dynamic analysis is performed in the time domain using sine sweep excitations without the need to linearize such a nonlinear semiactive system that is studied here. Through simulation, the effectiveness of both control algorithms is demonstrated for vibration isolation. The computation flops of the simulation in the SIMULINK environment are compared, and the adaptability is studied with respect to plant variations and different excitation profiles, both of which come across typically for vehicle suspension systems.
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