The
fact about the Hybrid Function.
Defining Hybrids
A vehicle is a hybrid if it utilizes more than one form of on-board energy to achieve propulsion. In practice, that means a hybrid will have a traditional internal-combustion engine and a fuel tank, as well as one or more electric motors and a battery pack.
A vehicle is a hybrid if it utilizes more than one form of on-board energy to achieve propulsion. In practice, that means a hybrid will have a traditional internal-combustion engine and a fuel tank, as well as one or more electric motors and a battery pack.
Hybrid
cars are sometimes mistakenly confused with electric vehicles. Hybrids are most often gasoline-burning
machines that utilize their electric bits to collect and reuse energy that
normally goes to waste in standard cars. Theoretically, diesel-electric hybrids
would be even more fuel-efficient, but hybrid systems and diesel engines both
represent extra cost. So far, installing both in the same vehicle has proven to
be prohibitively expensive.
Hybrid Car Glossary
Below are the terms most often used when referring to hybrid vehicles.
Below are the terms most often used when referring to hybrid vehicles.
Motor-generator: The more accurate term for the electric motor. It provides
supplemental acceleration "oomph" when operating as a motor by
drawing electricity from the battery. Several hybrids have two, and a few
models employ three.
Stop-start: Present on all hybrids, the engine's traditional starter motor
is absent because the motor-generator takes on that function, too.
Hybrid-control software shuts the engine off while stopped at traffic signals and
automatically restarts it again with the electric motor when the driver
releases the brake pedal. Eliminating the fuel waste of an idling gas engine
causes overall mpg to climb significantly and tailpipe emissions to drop,
especially in town.
Regenerative braking: An important function of the motor-generator is to generate
electricity to recharge the battery as it absorbs a portion of the vehicle's
momentum when slowing or coasting downhill. Normal cars waste all of their
excess momentum as heat in the brakes. Regenerative braking is insufficient to
stop a car quickly, so conventional hydraulic brakes are still necessary.
Electric drive: Operating the vehicle on electric power alone is possible if the
hybrid system has enough electrical capacity. The maximum speed and distance
over which electric-only operation can be sustained varies from essentially
zero to a handful of miles, and has everything to do with the weight and
aerodynamics of the vehicle, the strength of the motor-generator and, more than
anything else, the capacity of the battery.
Hybrid Layouts
Not all hybrids possess these attributes in equal measure, nor do they operate the same way. It all begins with the layout of the system.
Not all hybrids possess these attributes in equal measure, nor do they operate the same way. It all begins with the layout of the system.
Series hybrids: This is the oldest hybrid type. Diesel-electric locomotives and
ships using this layout appeared in the last century. In a series hybrid car,
electric motors alone turn the drive wheels, so the motors must be large and
powerful. But a series hybrid is not a "pure" electric vehicle. It
has a dedicated engine that burns fuel and expels emissions. The engine powers
a generator to produce the electricity on-board the vehicle.
The 2014 BMW i3 and the out-of-production 2012 Fisker Karma use series hybrid systems. But these
cars from BMW and Fisker are also plug-in hybrids. More about
that flavour of hybrid a little later.
Nearly
every carmaker also has a series hybrid demonstration vehicle that uses a
hydrogen-powered fuel cell instead of a gasoline engine to generate the
electricity. Those cars, usually called fuel-cell electric vehicles (FCEVs), are expected to start
entering the retail market in small numbers by 2015. Look for them initially in
limited areas, such as the Los Angeles basin, where some sort of retail
hydrogen fuel system is present.
Parallel hybrids: These are the simplest and least costly type in current
automotive use. Here the output of the engine and the electric motor are
blended together upstream of the transmission. The engine dominates, never
doing anything except propelling the vehicle. An electric motor provides an
extra boost, and if it's large enough, it may be the car's only source of
propulsion for short distances. In conventional parallel hybrids, such as the
Civic from Honda, regenerative
braking is the sole source of recharging power for the battery.
Series-parallel hybrids: As the name implies, these cars contain elements of both types.
Conceptually, the engine and the electric motor feed into the transmission via
separate paths, enabling fully independent propulsion via the engine or
electricity. In parallel fashion, the motor-generator can either bolster the
engine's output or provide battery charging via regenerative braking.
Series-parallel motor-generators are sizable, so electric-only operation (at
low speeds for a couple miles) is a standard feature. The engine can still
power the car, but it can also be reassigned to battery charging duty while the
electric motor drives the vehicle: the classic series operation.
In
a series-parallel hybrid vehicle, a computer monitors driving conditions and
the state of the battery to decide which mode is most efficient at any given
moment. The seamless blending of these modes is then carried out by a unique continuously variable
transmission (CVT) that uses
a planetary gear set as opposed to a system of variable pulleys and belts.
Series-parallel hardware is more expensive, but the payoff in efficiency is
huge: To date, these hybrids offer the largest gains in mpg, the highest
electric-only speeds and the longest electric-only run times. Ford's C-Max and Fusion hybrids
and all Toyota and Lexus hybrids
use series-parallel systems.
Plug-in hybrids: These are not really a fourth type of hybrid because a plug-in
could conceivably be based on any of the above layouts. Plug-in hybrids (also
called PHEVs) began appearing in the market with the Chevrolet Volt at the end of 2010. Their
distinguishing characteristic is a significantly enlarged battery that permits
the electric driving range to swell beyond the mile or two possible with
regular hybrids. It also provides a way to plug the battery into an electrical
outlet for recharging while parked. The benefit of the plug-in hybrid is its
ability to travel in all-electric mode for most short trips, reserving the
gasoline engine for longer drives. That's a feature that can boost fuel economy
into 100 MPGe territory. In addition to the Volt, plug-in hybrids include the Ford Fusion Energi, Toyota Prius and a version of the Honda Accord.
Hybrids, by Degree
Some hybrids have more power than others. Automakers have developed terms to describe their various levels of electric oomph.
Some hybrids have more power than others. Automakers have developed terms to describe their various levels of electric oomph.
"Mini" hybrids: This is a class that adds a modicum of electric assist to the
stop-start system. Because these cars don't offer full hybrid capabilities,
they can be built using very small and relatively inexpensive nickel-metal hydride or lithium-ion batteries
to help keep costs down. General Motors pioneered
the system, which it callseAssist, and first offered it in the
four-cylinder version of the 2013 Buick LaCrosse. Buick intentionally
avoided using the term "hybrid" with this system because it believes,
as do most other automakers, that consumers have greater expectations for
anything labelled "hybrid."
Mild hybrids: These usually are parallel hybrids without sufficient power to
propel the vehicle in all-electric mode more than a handful of yards. The
gasoline engine essentially operates all of the time and is augmented by the
electric motor when more power is needed for accelerating or climbing hills,
for instance. The 2013 Honda Civic Hybrid is
an example.
Strong hybrids: These can be parallel, series or series-parallel vehicles. They
have large enough electric motors and powerful enough batteries to provide some
degree of all-electric mode, along with stop-start, regenerative and gas engine assist. The Toyota Prius was the first strong hybrid in the
market and remains the best-selling of all the hybrids.
Vehicles with stop-start systems: This is another class of hybrid-inspired vehicles coming into
the market, making use of the stop-start systems that were perfected for
hybrids. They are not hybrids because they don't have two power systems
(although some in the industry call them micro-hybrids). Instead, they use a
beefed-up starter motor and battery or capacitor to provide the stop-start
function but have no electric assist for acceleration and no other aspects of a
conventional hybrid.
Still,
stop-start systems can offer 3-10 percent increases in fuel efficiency and are
expected to become almost universal as automakers strive to achieve rapid
improvement in their fleets' overall fuel efficiency. The 2013 Ram 1500 HFE (high fuel-efficiency) pickup from Chrysler has a stop-start system. Ford offers auto stop-start as a
stand-alone optional feature of the 2013 Fusion SE.
All About Batteries
Hybrids employ two battery types. Nickel-metal hydride batteries are used in almost all current hybrids, but they are not sufficiently efficient and compact for plug-in use.
Hybrids employ two battery types. Nickel-metal hydride batteries are used in almost all current hybrids, but they are not sufficiently efficient and compact for plug-in use.
Lithium-ion
batteries that are durable enough for automotive use are the battery of choice
for plug-ins and, increasingly, for newer conventional hybrid models. They are
lighter and more energy-dense than nickel-metal hydride batteries. Battery
engineers continue to seek the next-generation hybrid or electric vehicle
battery that will offer even lighter weight, lower cost and greater range.
Whatever
the type, hybrid batteries are considered part of the emissions system, and as
such are covered under terms of the mandatory emissions warranty: eight years
or 100,000 miles in federal emissions states, and 10 years or 150,000 miles in states that adhere to California emissions standards.
Other Hybrid Considerations
Because of its very different powertrain, automakers had to make changes to the basic accessory equipment of the hybrid car to allow the engine to shut off when cruising on electricity or waiting at stoplights.
Because of its very different powertrain, automakers had to make changes to the basic accessory equipment of the hybrid car to allow the engine to shut off when cruising on electricity or waiting at stoplights.
Traditional
hydraulic power steering needs a running engine to drive the required pump, so
hybrid engineers employed electronic power steering (EPS)
instead. Adopting EPS is easy because it's rapidly becoming the norm on regular
family cars anyway. It's possible to retain hydraulic steering by using a
remote electric pump, but so far only Porsche has experimented with this
approach in the interest of maintaining excellent steering feel.
Air-conditioning
systems also use an engine-driven compressor, so hybrids with enough
battery capacity use an electrically driven compressor instead. Some lower-cost
hybrids retain their engine-driven compressors, but their drivers must engage
an "Eco A/C" mode to limit compressor function when stopped. If they
forget, or choose not to, the engine can't shut down at stoplights and they'll
miss out on much of the hybrid fuel savings.
Then
there's the engine itself. Hybrids that employ a CVT can take advantage of the
more efficient Atkinson cycle, a variation of the traditional four-stroke
engine cycle that significantly modifies when air is let into the combustion
chamber. The Atkinson cycle requires engine speed (rpm) to be relatively
constant, and a CVT keeps the engine's rpm in the Atkinson "sweet
spot" via its ever-changing step less gear ratios.
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