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Energy Modeling of Deceleration Strategies for Electric Vehicles

Rapid adoption of battery electric vehicles means improving energy consumption is a top priority. Regenerative braking converts kinetic energy to electrical energy stored in the battery pack while the vehicle is decelerating. Coasting is an alternative strategy that minimizes energy consumption by decelerating the vehicle using only road load. This work refines a battery electric vehicle model to assess regen, coasting, and other deceleration strategies. A road load model based on public test data calculates tractive effort based on speed and acceleration. Bidirectional Willans lines are the basis of the powertrain model simulating battery energy consumption. Regen braking tractive and powertrain power are modeled backward from prescribed linear velocity curves, and the coasting trajectory is forward modeled given zero tractive power. Decel modes based on zero battery and motor power are also forward modeled. Multi-Mode decel (using a low power mode with regen) is presented as an intermediate strategy. An example vehicle is modeled in fixed-route simulations using these strategies and is scored based on travel time, energy consumption, and bias towards minimizing one of those metrics. Regen braking has the lowest travel time, and coasting the lowest energy consumption, but such bias increases overall cost. Multi-mode strategies lower overall cost by balancing reductions in travel time and energy consumption. The model is sensitive to grade and accessory load fluctuation, making this work adaptable to different vehicles and environments. This work demonstrates the utility of regen braking alternatives that could enhance connected and automated vehicle systems in battery electric vehicles. / Master of Science / As battery electric vehicle adoption accelerates, reducing energy consumption remains a priority. While regenerative braking saves energy by recharging the battery pack using kinetic energy, coasting (deceleration caused only by road load) has potential as well. This work focuses on refining a battery electric vehicle model and assessing various deceleration strategies. A road load model calculates wheel tractive effort, and Willans lines are used to model powertrain energy consumption. Coasting and other deceleration modes based on zero system power are modeled to produce speed trajectories, and regenerative braking power is modeled using prescribed linear velocity curves. Strategies that use multiple decel modes are also considered. An example battery electric vehicle is assessed using these strategies in fixed-route simulations. Vehicle performance is scored based on battery energy consumption and travel time. Regenerative braking has the lowest travel time, and coasting the lowest energy consumption, but those strategies also have the highest overall cost. Multi-mode strategies lower cost by balancing energy consumption and travel time. The strategies are sensitive to changes in road grade and accessory power, meaning the model can be used with different vehicles and environments. This work demonstrates the utility of alternatives to regenerative braking and how such strategies could enhance battery electric vehicles with autonomous capabilities.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/111628
Date24 August 2022
CreatorsHom, William Lee
ContributorsMechanical Engineering, Nelson, Douglas J., Huxtable, Scott T., Southward, Steve C.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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