• DocumentCode
    1461466
  • Title

    Integrated thermal management of a hybrid electric vehicle

  • Author

    Traci, Richard M. ; Acebal, Robert ; Mohler, Tom

  • Author_Institution
    Sci. Applications Int. Corp., La Jolla, CA, USA
  • Volume
    35
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    1999
  • fDate
    1/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    479
  • Lastpage
    483
  • Abstract
    A thermal management methodology, based on the Vehicle Integrated Thermal Management Analysis Code (VITMAC), has been developed for a notional vehicle employing the all-electric combat vehicle (AECV) concept. AECV uses a prime power source, such as a diesel, to provide mechanical energy which is converted to electrical energy and stored in a central energy storage system consisting of flywheels, batteries and/or capacitors. The combination of prime power and stored energy powers the vehicle drive system and also advanced weapons subsystems such as an ETC or EM gun, electrically driven lasers, an EM armor system and an active suspension. Every major system is electrically driven with reclamation when possible from braking and gun recoil. Thermal management of such a complicated energy transfer and utilization system is a major design consideration due to the substantial heat rejection requirements. In the present paper, an overall integrated thermal management system (TMS) is described which accounts for energy losses from each subsystem component, accepts the heat using multiple coolant loops and expels the heat from the vehicle. VITMAC simulations are used to design the TMS and to demonstrate that a conventional TMS approach is capable of successfully handling vehicle heat rejection requirements under stressing operational conditions
  • Keywords
    capacitor storage; cooling; electric vehicles; electromagnetic launchers; electrothermal launchers; flywheels; heat losses; military systems; power supplies to apparatus; secondary cells; thermal analysis; EM armor system; VITMAC simulations; Vehicle Integrated Thermal Management Analysis Code; active suspension; all-electric combat vehicle; batteries; braking; capacitors; electromagnetic guns; electrothermochemical guns; energy losses; energy reclamation; flywheels; gun recoil; hybrid electric vehicle; integrated thermal management; lasers; multiple coolant loops; operational conditions; prime power source; vehicle drive system; vehicle heat rejection requirements; Batteries; Capacitors; Energy management; Energy storage; Flywheels; Hybrid electric vehicles; Mechanical energy; Power system management; Thermal management; Vehicle driving;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9464
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/20.738455
  • Filename
    738455