Engine On/Off Control for the Energy Management of a Serial Hybrid Electric Bus via Convex Optimization
Journal article, 2014

Convex optimization has recently been suggested for solving the optimal energy management problem of hybrid electric vehicles. Compared to dynamic programming, this approach can significantly reduce the computational time, but the price to pay are additional model approximations and heuristics for discrete decision variables such as engine on/off control. In this paper, the globally optimal engine on/off conditions are derived analytically. It is demonstrated that the optimal engine on/off strategy is to switch the engine on if and only if the requested power exceeds a certain non-constant threshold. By iteratively computing the threshold and the power split using convex optimization, the optimal solution to the energy management problem is found. The effectiveness of the presented approach is demonstrated in two sizing case studies. The first case study deals with high energy capacity batteries, while the second case study deals with supercapacitors that have much lower energy capacity. In both cases, the proposed algorithm yields optimal results much faster than the dynamic programming algorithm.

Convex optimization

sizing

energy management

hybrid vehicles

Author

Philipp Elbert

ETH Zurich

Tobias Nüesch

ETH Zurich

Andreas Ritter

ETH Zurich

Nikolce Murgovski

Chalmers, Signals and Systems, Systems and control

Lino Guzzella

ETH Zurich

IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology

0018-9545 (ISSN)

Vol. 63 8 3549-3559

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Energy Engineering

Computational Mathematics

Control Engineering

DOI

10.1109/TVT.2014.2304137

More information

Created

10/8/2017