Planes, trains and automobiles

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Transcript Planes, trains and automobiles

Planes, trains and automobiles

• • • • 27% of the total national energy budget goes into transportation Of this 27%, 35% is used by automobiles Autos are among the least energy efficient modes of transportation (Bicycles are number 1) Rely in the internal combustion engine

What does it take to move a car?

• • • • • • Four force terms need to be considered: Force needed to accelerate the vehicle – F a = ma Force needed to climb any hills – F h =msg, where s is the slope of the hill Force needed to overcome internal energy losses (tire flexure, wheel bearings, friction with the road surface, etc) – F r = C r mv, where C r is a constant term Force needed to overcome aerodynamic drag on the vehicle, depends upon speed.

– F ad = C D A f v 2 /370 where C D is the aerodynamic drag coefficient, A f the frontal area of the vehicle. is So the total force required is the sum of these 4 terms: – F T = F a + F h + F r + F ad

Energy required

• • The energy required will be equal to the work done by the force over a given distance or – E = W = Fd or – E = Pt, where P is the power output and t is the time the vehicle is operated or – E = Fvt So to minimize energy, you need to minimize the forces.

Making current cars more efficient

• • • • • • • Minimize the force required: – ma+msg+ C r mv+C D A f v 2 /370 Make m small Make C r Make C D small small Make A f small Make v small Or any combination of reducing these values

Flex-Fuel Vehicles

• • • • Internal combustion engines designed to run on more than one fuel Second fuel is usually ethanol or sometimes methanol Fuel blend is detected by sensors that adjust ignition and timing to match the mixture Most North American vehicles are optimized to run on mixtures up to E85.

The first Flex Fuel Vehicle

• Any guesses?

The first flex fuel vehicle was

• • • • The Ford Model T!!!!

Designed to run on petroleum, ethanol or kerosene Prohibition made ethanol unviable and decreasing costs of petroleum made it more attractive 1909-1927

Alternatives to the internal combustion engine

• • • • • Flywheels Electric batteries Hybrids Alcohol Hydrogen

Flywheels

• • • • • • • Energy storage device Flywheel is spun up and the energy is stored as rotational energy to be used at a later time Designed to resist losses of rotational energy due to friction, etc Energy stored is given by • E velocity.

k = Iω 2 where I = moment of inertial of the flywheel, and ω is the angular The moment of inertial is a function of the mass and the distance from the center of rotation So the structure of the flywheel and the rotational rate determine the amount of energy stored.

Ultimate limit on the energy storage is the strength of the flywheel. Spin it too fast, and it will tear itself apart.

Flywheel vehicles

• • • • • • Could extract energy from braking-rather than waste the energy into frictional heating of brakepads, reverse the engine and spin up the flywheel. Need to be recharged on the power gird, saves gas, but drains electricity The big implementation problem is materials which can withstand the stress needed to spin the flywheel fast enough to make this a worthwhile alternative.

Prototype mass transportation vehicles have been built (In Sweden and by Lockheed) Used in Formula 1 racing to recover energy lost in braking and along with a continuously variable transmission to improve Formula one car acceleration.

Also used in the incredible hulk roller coaster at Universal Islands of Adventure in Orlando, Fl.

– Ride starts with an uphill acceleration, rather than a gravity drop.

– Flywheels are used to provide the initial energy impulse, otherwise the park would brown out the local energy grid everytime the ride began.

Hybrids

• • • • • • • • Still use gasoline powered engines, but combine them with (usually) batteries to achieve better fuel economy.

Different from a flex-fuel vehicle:Flexible fuel vehicles (FFVs) are designed to run on gasoline or a blend of up to 85% ethanol (E85). • no loss in performance when operating on E85.

• FFVs typically get about 25-30% fewer miles per gallon when fueled with E85.

Idea is to use as small as possible a gasoline engine, and only when it can be run at peak efficiency. Use excess power to recharge the battery (no need to tap the power grid) Use energy from braking (regenerative braking) to also charge the battery Work best in stop and go driving. Major initiative in the auto industry right now.

Result in using less gas-stretching our fossil fuels

Hybrid cars

Hybrid Models

• • • • • • • Hyunai Sonata Hybrid Honda CRZ and Fit Mercedes Benz ML 450 BMW Dodge Ram Chevy Silverado Toyota Prius

Pure electric vehicles

• • • • • • • • • • Powered by an electric motor, rather than a gasoline engine Needs batteries – current generation of batteries have 520 times less energy density than gasoline.

Need to be charged from the power grid If all the vehicles in the US were converted to electric cars, it would triple the current electric energy generation Recharging electric vehicles takes time- several hours, whereas it takes minutes to refill your gas tank Batteries have a finite lifetime, need to be replaced every 2-3 years at a current cost of 1000 Limited range (less than 100 miles before recharging is needed) Ultimate limit is current battery technology-current lead acid batteries have not changed much in 100 years. Environmental effects from the disposal of lead acid batteries No new promising battery technologies on the horizon to substantially help electric cars

Electric Car Engine

Types of electric vehicles

• • Ford Focus EV due in late 2011 Nissan Leaf - out now

Fuel cells

• • • • An electrochemical conversion device Chemical reactions cause electrons (current) to flow Requires a fuel, an oxidant and an electrolyte ( a substance that contains free ions and acts as a conductor) Typical type of fuel cell is called a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC)