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- 2012 AIChE Annual Meeting
- Fuels and Petrochemicals Division
- Fuel Cell Technology II
- (561g) Electrochemical Equipment Design for Hybrid Vehicles
Due to the drive cycle expected during vehicle operation, the proposed design scheme should include power demand variability as an underlying element. It is further recognized that a high level controller is needed to coordinate device interactions as well as ensure that demanded power is sent to the electric motor driving the vehicle. Clearly, the characteristics of this high level controller will influence the required size of each device. As such, controller characteristics have been included as design variables. Additional design criteria include; max power and energy density for each type of device and losses associated with energy conversion.
Concerning computational issues, we will show that nearly all of the nonlinear constraints discussed above can be converted to a convex form. The exception is a limited set of scalar reverse-convex inequalities, used to define the relation between variance and standard deviation for key process variables. Given this convex / reverse-convex form a computationally efficient branch-and-bound algorithm has been developed to obtain globally optimal solutions to the proposed hybrid vehicle design problem.