The vehicle is part of a new research project, ChargeCar, headed by Illah Nourbakhsh, associate professor of robotics. The project is exploring how electric vehicles can be customized to cost-effectively meet an individual's specific commuting needs and how an electric vehicle's efficiency can be boosted and its battery life extended by using artificial intelligence to manage power.
"Most electric cars today are being designed with top-down engineering to match the performance of gas-powered cars," Nourbakhsh said. "Our goal is to revolutionize urban commuting by taking a different approach -- by first analyzing the needs, conditions and habits of the daily commutes of actual people and then using this 'commute ecology' to develop electric vehicles suited to each unique commute." The researchers calculate that a typical Pittsburgh commuter might save 80 percent of energy costs by switching from a gas car to an electric car.
ChargeCar isn't developing new vehicles, but rather a knowledge base that can be used to convert gas-powered vehicles using existing technology. The researchers are working with Pittsburgh mechanics to develop community-level expertise in vehicle conversion, as well as a set of conversion "recipes."
Key to the project is a vehicle architecture called smart power management, which uses artificial intelligence to manage the flow of power between conventional electric car batteries and a device called a supercapacitor. Supercapacitors are electrochemical capacitors with unusually high energy density and have typically been used to start locomotives, tanks and diesel trucks. Because it can store and rapidly release large amounts of electrical power, a supercapacitor can serve as a buffer between the battery pack and the vehicle's electric motors, improving the vehicle's responsiveness while reducing the charge/discharge cycling that shortens battery life.
"Many people have talked about using supercapacitors as buffers on a battery, but we also will use artificial intelligence to manage how power is discharged and stored," Nourbakhsh said. "Based on a driver's route and habits, the smart power management system will decide whether to draw power for the electric motors from the batteries or the supercapacitor and decide where to store electricity produced by the regenerative braking system as the car slows down or goes down a hill."
Determining the optimal means of managing power will be one of ChargeCar's primary goals. The researchers calculate that an intelligent electric car controller could recapture 48 percent of the energy during braking and that a supercapacitor could reduce 56 percent of the load on the batteries and reduce heating of the batteries -- which shortens battery life -- by 53 percent.
"The number one cost of electric vehicle ownership is the batteries," Nourbakhsh said. "Smart power management will save money initially because it pairs a low-cost battery pack with a small supercapacitor. And it will continue to save money by increasing efficiency and extending battery life." By customizing each vehicle to the owner's specific commute, ChargeCar will save money for some owners by allowing them to purchase the minimum number of batteries necessary.
The converted Scion xB will serve as a test bed for developing smart power management techniques, measuring battery lifetimes and refining conversion techniques.
The ChargeCar project has created a national clearinghouse for commuter data at http://chargecar.org; people across the country are invited to store their commute data via GPS and upload it to the site. The site can then use the data to show individuals the energy cost of gasoline vs. electricity for their commute and also can show how much wear and tear on batteries could be saved on the commute by using a supercapacitor. The researchers will use the database to help them tailor solutions to individual commutes and they will make the database available to all electric car researchers and enthusiasts.
The ChargeCar team includes Gregg Podnar, co-principal investigator with Nourbakhsh; research engineer Josh Schapiro; senior research programmer Chris Bartley; project scientist Ben Brown; Intel Labs Pittsburgh senior researcher Jason Campbell; and students Vibhav Sreekanti, Paul Dille and Matt Duescher.
Customizing electric cars for cost-effective urban commuting
Followers
Sites
Eco Alternative Energy
Blog Archive
-
▼
09
(143)
-
▼
Nov
(115)
- Arctic Heats Up More Than Other Places: High Sea L...
- Carbon Emissions Linked To Global Warming In Simpl...
- Abrupt Climate Change: Will It Happen This Century?
- In The Warming West, Climate Most Significant Fact...
- Scientists argue for a new type of climate target
- Including Environmental Data Improves Effectivenes...
- Paleoecologists Offer New Insight Into How Climate...
- Plants Could Override Climate Change Effects On Wi...
- New climate treaty could put species at risk, scie...
- Blue Energy Seems Feasible And Offers Considerable...
- Volatile gas could turn Rwandan lake into a freshw...
- Controllable Rubber Trailing Edge Flap To Reduce L...
- Dutch Electricity System Can Cope With Large-scale...
- Robot Inspects Wind Energy Converters
- New Rechargeable Lithium Batteries Could Jump-star...
- Accelerated Melting Of Continental Icepacks Is Maj...
- Mediterranean Sea Dried Up Five Million Years Ago
- Layers Of Bottom Sediment Reveal Secrets Of Enviro...
- Black Sea Pollution Could Be Harnessed As Renewabl...
- Sea stars bulk up to beat the heat
- Hidden Costs Of Energy Production And Use
- Is The Dead Sea Dying? Levels Dropping At Alarming...
- Plugging Into An Electric Vehicle Revolution
- Key Step Made Towards Turning Methane Gas Into Liq...
- Climate Scientists Uncover Major Accounting Flaw I...
- Shifting The World To 100 Percent Clean, Renewable...
- Customizing electric cars for cost-effective urban...
- Emissions increase despite financial crisis
- Sweet solution to energy production
- Renewable Energies Will Benefit US Workers' Health...
- Keeping Sights On Big Breakers With Radar: Scienti...
- How Countries Can Integrate Wind Power Smoothly In...
- Key Issues For Future Of Wind Energy In Spain
- Nuclear weapons: Predicting the unthinkable
- Slowdown in wind market causes revenue fall for Br...
- China Integrated names price for public offering
- Satcon hit by crisis but aims to bounce back
- SunPower makes solid third quarter finish
- Ingersoll-Rand's revenues reel due to crisis-hit m...
- Solutia prices $ 400 million senior unsecured notes
- Australia: AU$ 21.5M to Asia for carbon capture an...
- U.N. seeks $ 10 billion aid as good start to clima...
- CO2 caps central to climate fight: UK
- US urged to join IRENA
- World Bank grants new $ 500M loan to Indonesia as ...
- European Commission issues call for proposals for ...
- International renewables agency chooses headquarters
- U.S. officials to prod China on climate change
- EU imposes duties on US biodiesel
- EU president Sweden says U.N. climate talks too slow
- Global climate deal still possible: Brazil's Lula
- EU approves state aid for British CO2 scheme
- EU biodiesel output up 35 percent, capacity growing
- Clouds, seas to be targeted by U.N. climate report
- Magma Energy secures 32.32% stake in geothermal co...
- Vestas makes slight increase in revenues
- Vattenfall bears out crisis' impact on energy
- £1 million invested to build blending stations acr...
- Europe’s biggest consented wind farm in Scotland w...
- UK town of Berwick approves planning for micro tur...
- UK city of Leeds approves planning of region’s tal...
- The UK’s Dorset coast targeted as site for £175-mi...
- US, Italy to cooperate on carbon capture and storage
- RUSNANO invests in solar thin-film, pushes Russia ...
- 1.5 MW hydro project in Rannoch River, Scotland to...
- Ireland creates high-level green economy promotion...
- UK on track to meet Kyoto targets—government report
- 6 reasons to use biofuels.
- Charging Ahead with Nanotechnology
- Dell Continues to Go Green
- Using Your Lawn's Landscape to Cut Energy Bills
- Ways to Use Biomass Energy
- Energy Saving Tips
- Solar Heated Swimming Pools
- Painting Solar Cells onto Steel
- The Revolution of Wind Power
- The Power Generated From Sun And Wind
- Gimme a Green Cell Phone
- Pumping Carbon Dioxide to Generate Power and More
- Solar Power Tractor
- Water powered Engine
- Geothermal
- Bamboo Bike
- Salty Water In Fresh Water Out
- Micro Hydro Power
- Fuel Cells
- Renewable Energy From Environment
- Cyclone Power Technologies to Present All-Fuel Eng...
- Korea Approves Patent on Cyclone Power Technologie...
- World’s First ‘Food and Fuel’ Enabling Technology
- Biodiesel from the Fermentation of Sugar Process u...
- Kinder Morgan Begins Biodiesel Shipments on Oregon...
- ALGAE-FUELED CAR COMPLETES 3,750 MILE CROSS COUNTR...
- Waste Plastic to Oil Conversion Process Produces O...
- Puerto Rico signs biotechnology law to simplify po...
- Covert Army ops to run on diesel hybrids
- The “How To” of Hydropower Plants - Green Energy O...
- Energy Solutions for Various Types of Buildings Pa...
- Energy Solutions for Various Types of Buildings Pa...
- Energy Solutions for Various Types of Buildings Pa...
-
▼
Nov
(115)
Labels
- Alternative Energy (1)
- Atmopheric gases (1)
- BioDisel (4)
- BIOFUEL (3)
- Biomass (5)
- Carbon Emissions (2)
- Chile (1)
- Climate Change Effects (13)
- Diesel Hybrids (3)
- Earth Climate (16)
- Earthquake (3)
- Eco Friendly (12)
- Ecology (2)
- Electric Vehicles (3)
- Energy Efficecy (5)
- Energy Saving (2)
- Food Crisis (1)
- Geothermal (2)
- Global Warming (6)
- Green Energy (5)
- Green Environment (13)
- Green News (26)
- Green Politics (18)
- Green Stocks and Market (13)
- Hydro Power (5)
- Matter and Energy (1)
- Nano Technology (1)
- Natural Gas Power (2)
- Recycle (5)
- Renewable Energy (11)
- Save Environment (3)
- Saving Planet Earth (15)
- Solar Energy (8)
- Tsunami (2)
- U.N (1)
- Uk (2)
- Wind Energy (18)
0 comments:
Post a Comment