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Comparison of Parallel and Series Hybrid Power Trains for Transit Bus Applications
Author(s) -
Zhiming Gao,
C. Stuart Daw,
David Smith,
Tim J. LaClair,
James E. Parks,
Perry T. Jones
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
transportation research record journal of the transportation research board
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.624
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 2169-4052
pISSN - 0361-1981
DOI - 10.3141/2570-11
Subject(s) - train , automotive engineering , diesel fuel , series and parallel circuits , driving cycle , battery (electricity) , hybrid power , power (physics) , fuel efficiency , engineering , hybrid vehicle , series (stratigraphy) , environmental science , electrical engineering , electric vehicle , physics , cartography , quantum mechanics , voltage , geography , paleontology , biology
The fuel economy and emissions of conventional and hybrid buses equipped with emissions aftertreatment were evaluated via computational simulation for six representative city bus drive cycles. Both series and parallel configurations for the hybrid case were studied. The simulation results indicated that series hybrid buses have the greatest overall advantage in fuel economy. The series and parallel hybrid buses were predicted to produce similar carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon tailpipe emissions but were also predicted to have reduced tailpipe emissions of nitrogen oxides compared with the conventional bus in higher speed cycles. For the New York bus cycle, which has the lowest average speed among the cycles evaluated, the series bus tailpipe emissions were somewhat higher than they were for the conventional bus; the parallel hybrid bus had significantly lower tailpipe emissions. All three bus power trains were found to require periodic active diesel particulate filter regeneration to maintain control of particulate matter. Plug-in operation of series hybrid buses appears to offer significant fuel economy benefits and is easily employed because of the relatively large battery capacity that is typical of the series hybrid configuration.

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