This study presents a simplified model of a midsized vehicle powered by a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell stack together with a lead-acid battery as an energy buffer. The model is used with dynamic programming in order to find the optimal coordination of the two power sources while penalizing transient excursions in oxygen concentration in the fuel cell and the state of charge in the battery. The effects of the battery size on the overall energy losses for different drive cycles are determined, and the optimal power split policies are analyzed to quantify all the energy losses and their paths in an effort to clarify the hybridization needs for a fuel cell vehicle with constraints on dynamically varying variables. Finally, a causal nonpredictive controller is presented. The battery sizing results from the dynamic programming optimizations and the causal controller are compared.
Skip Nav Destination
e-mail: [email protected]
e-mail: [email protected]
Article navigation
May 2007
This article was originally published in
Journal of Fuel Cell Science and Technology
Research Papers
Optimum Battery Size for Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle With Transient Loading Consideration—Part II
Olle Sundström,
Olle Sundström
Measurement and Control Laboratory,
e-mail: [email protected]
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
Search for other works by this author on:
Anna Stefanopoulou
Anna Stefanopoulou
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
e-mail: [email protected]
University of Michigan
, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Search for other works by this author on:
Olle Sundström
Measurement and Control Laboratory,
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerlande-mail: [email protected]
Anna Stefanopoulou
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of Michigan
, Ann Arbor, MI 48109e-mail: [email protected]
J. Fuel Cell Sci. Technol. May 2007, 4(2): 176-184 (9 pages)
Published Online: December 20, 2006
Article history
Received:
May 3, 2006
Revised:
December 20, 2006
Connected Content
This is a correction to:
Optimum Battery Size for Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle— Part I
Citation
Sundström, O., and Stefanopoulou, A. (December 20, 2006). "Optimum Battery Size for Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle With Transient Loading Consideration—Part II." ASME. J. Fuel Cell Sci. Technol. May 2007; 4(2): 176–184. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2713779
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Study on the Preparation of High Intrinsic Conductivity Perovskite Li0.33La0.56TiO3 Solid-State Electrolyte by Systematic Process Optimization
J. Electrochem. En. Conv. Stor (May 2025)
Numerical Investigation of a Vapor Chamber-Assisted Liquid Cooling System for Cylindrical Battery Thermal Management
J. Electrochem. En. Conv. Stor (May 2025)
A Mechanical Model for Carbon Paper Gas Diffusion Layers for PEM Fuel Cells Including Fiber and Binder Failure
J. Electrochem. En. Conv. Stor
Dynamic loading for solid oxide stacks under limited actuation
J. Electrochem. En. Conv. Stor
Related Articles
Optimum Battery Size for Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle— Part I
J. Fuel Cell Sci. Technol (May,2007)
A Comparative Analysis of Energy Management Strategies for Hybrid Electric Vehicles
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (May,2011)
System-Level Model and Stochastic Optimal Control for a PEM Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (December,2006)
Modeling and Analysis of Transient Behavior of Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicles
J. Fuel Cell Sci. Technol (August,2007)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Efficient Audio Retrieval Based on Locality Sensitive Hash
International Conference on Instrumentation, Measurement, Circuits and Systems (ICIMCS 2011)
Dynamic Programming
Engineering Optimization: Applications, Methods, and Analysis
The Use of Hash Table for Building the Distance Matrix in a Pair-Wise Sequence Alignment
International Conference on Software Technology and Engineering (ICSTE 2012)