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    2010 – Chart of the year

    2010 – Chart of the year
    by Euan Mearns

    A picture says a thousand words. In this post you will find only charts and graphs conveying important points from the world of energy 2010.

    Readers are invited to post their favorite charts from 2010 in the comments. Instructions are given at the end of this post. This is a charts only thread, no text at all (though posting links is OK), noncompliant posts will be deleted. An energy theme is preferred though other related themes such as economy, population, sustainability are acceptable. Climate charts that do not link directly to energy will be deleted.

    Within a week or two TheOilDrum will host an open thread that will enable discussion of the charts posted, but today is New Year, discipline please – charts only. Thank you – and hopefully a happy 2011 to one and all.

    Original article available here: http://energybulletin.net/stories/2011-01-01/2010-chart-year

    Denso, 이젝터 이용 자동차 에어컨 시스템

    Denso, 이젝터 이용 자동차 에어컨 시스템

    약25%까지 줄일 수 있어서 차 량의 연료소비를 줄일수 있다.

    Denso사는 세계에서 처음으로 이젝터를 이용한 자동차 에어컨 시스템을 개발했다.

    이젝터를 사용함으로써 압축기에 소요되는 동력을 기존의 에어컨 대 비 약25%까지 줄일 수 있어서 궁극적으로 차량의 연료소비를 줄이는데 기여한다. 차량의 에어컨 시스템에 소요 되는 동력은 대부분 냉매를 압축하는데 소요된다.

    일반적인 에어컨 시스템에서는 응축기를 나온 높은 압력의 냉매를 낮은 압력의 증발기로 보내기 위해 팽창밸브를 통해 팽창시키게 되는데 이 팽창과정에서 에너지가 이용되지 못하고 손실된다. 이젝터를 이용해 응축기에서 나오는 냉매를 팽창시킴으로써 증발기 출구의 증기압력을 높여 압축기에 걸 리는 부하를 감소시킬 수 있다.

    Denso사는 이전에 이젝터 기술을 트럭의 냉동장치와 CO2 히트펌프 물 가열기에 적용했었다. 전통적인 이젝터는 차량의 에어컨으로 이용하기에는 크기가 커서 문제가 있었 으나 Denso사는 이젝터를 증발기 탱크와 일체화시킴으로써 이 문제를 극복하였다.

    이와 같이 설계함으로써 압력을 견디기 위해 이젝터를 두껍게 해야 될 필요성도 없어지고 증발기와 이젝터를 잇는 파이프도 필요 없게 됨에 따라 시스템이 간소화되어 전통적인 에어컨 증발기와 크기와 비슷해져 기존의 에어컨 증발기 대신 이젝터사이클 시스템 증발기를 이용할 수 있게 되었다.

    Original article available here: http://www.cleandiesel.co.kr/infor/tech_read.asp?id=14&pageNo=1&searchpart=&search=&mykeyword

    Pure Drive: Nissan’s alternative path to low CO2

    Pure Drive: Nissan’s alternative path to low CO2


    The HR12DDR version of Nissan’s 1.2-L inline triple features direct fuel injection with two injectors per cylinder and an Eaton-supplied Roots supercharger. The engine operates on the Miller combustion cycle to achieve sub-100 g/km efficiency.

    The electric car dawn may be fast approaching at Nissan, but the recently introduced 2011 Leaf EV represents only one of the company’s two-pronged vehicle strategy. The other part of the plan is “Pure Drive,” aimed at developing vehicles with high-efficiency internal-combustion engines (ICEs), transmissions, and hybrid systems.

    The new March, known internally as K13, is the first of the Pure Drive efforts. According to Chief Vehicle Specialist Tsuyoshi Kobayashi, the car surpasses what he calls the “Magic 20” mark, a measure of the car’s efficiency. The “20” part refers to 20 kilometers per liter of fuel consumed, as measured on Japan’s rather optimistic 10/15-mode urban cycle. The new March achieves a claimed 26 km/L (about 61.5 mpg)—best in its class in the Japanese market.

    In terms of fuel efficiency, the new March exceeds that of many Ka-class (660-cm3) mini vehicles. The achievement was “fervently wished for by our customers, dealers, and more so by us,” said Kobayashi, who is responsible for the car’s new V platform (the V stands for versatile).

    CVTC, dual injectors are enablers

    The car’s CO2 emissions are 114 g/km, as measured by the UN ECE 101 standards. Yet Nissan wanted to challenge two-digit CO2 numbers of the latest European diesel small cars with a gasoline engine model. It does so with the new European Micra, made in India and powered by a special HR12DDR version of the HR12 engine family. The car achieves a remarkable 95 g/km.

    The new Micra’s 1.2-L three-cylinder engine is armed to the hilt with technology. It features direct fuel injection, an Eaton Roots-type supercharger, dual continuously variable cam phasers for valve timing control (CVTC), sodium-cooled exhaust valves, hydrogen-free DLC (diamond-like coating) piston rings, and oil jets for cooling the undersides of the piston crowns.

    A Nissan engineer confided that the new gasoline engine is still less expensive than a comparable small-displacement diesel equipped with high-pressure common-rail injection, variable-geometry turbocharger, and a complex exhaust aftertreatment.

    The HR12DDR operates in the Miller (Atkinson) cycle. The enabler is the dual CVTC allowing late intake valve closing, thereby greatly reducing pumping loss. A high-compression ratio of 13:1 is quoted; however, it is really the Miller cycle’s expansion ratio that is comparable to a +9:1 compression ratio in a conventional engine.

    The supercharger, equipped with an on/off clutch, is employed under heavier load and high rpm, staying dormant otherwise.

    The supercharged HR12DDR produces power and torque equivalent to a naturally aspirated 1.5-L engine, according to Nissan. In its initial high-performance and super-frugal application in the Micra, a manual transmission and the Xtronic CVT with sub-geartrain will be offered.

    Another new Pure Drive development is found in the Japan-market Juke, which is powered by an updated version of the HR15DE DOHC 1.5-L four-cylinder that was first introduced in 2004 in the Japanese Tiida (Versa). While inheriting the same designation, the new engine features significant changes.

    First, it employs dual injectors per cylinder. The original HR has a single injector with 12 holes—six each injecting into one of the two intake ports. In the new engine, each of the intake ports has its own injector with 18 miniscule holes. As in the HR12DE triple, the straight port design that promotes charge tumble has replaced the double-deck version fitted with tumble-generating flap valve. Reduced air resistance brings a gain of about 4 kW (5.4 hp), according to Nissan.

    The dual-injector HR15DE is equipped with dual CVTC, vs. the original engine’s intake-only version. The addition of phasers on both camshafts enables later exhaust closing and earlier intake opening, increasing overlap during steady-state operations, thereby reducing induction resistance. The dual CVTC also allows a late intake valve closing during idling, in a semi-Miller-cycle manner. This reduces pumping losses.

    Using a high 10.5:1 compression ratio (and still content with regular grade gasoline), the dual-injector HR15DE produces 84 kW (113 hp) at 6000 rpm and 150 N·m (111 lb·ft) at 4000 rpm. The Japanese Juke is equipped with the Xtronic CVT with a sub-geartrain, providing a wide ratio span of 7.3.

    A high-performance, all-wheel-drive model in the Juke range is powered by the new MR16DDT direct-injection, turbocharged engine. The MR is Renault-Nissan’s midsize inline four-cylinder engine family covering 1.6 to 2.0-L displacements. The 1.6-L MR16DDT produces 142 kW (190 hp) and 240 N·m (177 lb·ft).

    Nissan is pursuing a vigorous downsizing path via direct injection and supercharging, the foremost and most determined effort among the Japanese OEMs.

    The MR16DDT-powered Juke will be equipped with an advanced all-wheel-drive system with rear torque-vectoring facility.

    Another new Nissan engine, the MR9R, is a diesel member of the MR family. It is an original Renault design that Nissan worked on to meet Japan’s Draconian exhaust-emissions requirements. Thus powered, the X-Trail compact CUV is the only Japanese market entry to satisfy the regulations and be commercially offered in the country. (The only other “qualified” diesel passenger car at this time is the Mercedes-Benz E350 BlueTEC.)

    The X-Trail exhaust aftertreatment system employs a new lean-NOx trap (LNT) catalyst, which Nissan claims is a world first in terms of its practical use. A long-awaited six-speed automatic transmission is now available in the diesel X-Trail.

    7-speed hybrid transmission

    The production version of a Pure Drive hybrid made a fall debut in the Nissan Fuga/Infiniti M luxury sedan. The system, previously detailed in AEI, is a parallel hybrid featuring a single motor and lithium-ion battery pack. The propulsion system comprises (as viewed from the front of the car) the VQ35 3.5-L V6, a single dry-plate clutch, an electric motor, and a JATCO seven-speed planetary gear automatic transmission.

    The forward single dry-plate clutch (clutch No. 1) and the automatic’s rear clutch (clutch No. 2) are used to alternate between electric, ICE, and electric/ICE combined and regenerative modes.

    The single-plate dry clutch (not unlike that in a manual gearbox car) and motor occupy the space previously occupied by the torque converter, thus fitting within the same transmission length. In fact, the hybrid transmission is based on Nissan-JATCO seven-speed automatic.

    As sampled by AEI at Nissan’s Japan proving grounds, the car moves off the line and shifts through gears electrically, and at up to 70 to 100 km/h (43 to 62 mph), with the ICE cut off. Clutch No. 1 engages on the fly and starts the engine, determining engagement based on appropriate speed, load, and SoC (state of charge) in the process.

    Nissan’s fleet-test program in the Los Angeles area, with each session lasting a week and including frequent freeway trips, showed that the car ran 59% of the time with the engine off—i.e., either running electrically or coasting/regenerating.

    Nissan reports that fuel consumption was on par with a compact 1.8-L car while providing better than 3.5-L V6 on-road performance.
    Jack Yamaguchi

    Original article available here: http://www.sae.org/mags/AEI/9194

    Purdue System Uses Auto-Exhaust Heat to Boost Fuel Efficiency

    Purdue System Uses Auto-Exhaust Heat to Boost Fuel Efficiency

    By Alan Harman
    WardsAuto.com, Dec 2, 2010 8:58 AM

    A system that harvests heat from an engine’s exhaust to generate electricity and reduce a vehicle’s fuel consumption is under development at Purdue University.

    A university team is collaborating with General Motors Co. on the development of a prototype that uses thermoelectric generators, or TEGs, says Xianfan Xu, Purdue professor-mechanical engineering and electrical and computer engineering.

    TEGs generate an electric current to charge batteries and power a vehicle’s electrical systems, reducing the engine’s workload and improving fuel economy.

    The research at the university is funded with a $1.4 million, 3-year grant from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.

    The prototype, to be installed in the exhaust system behind the catalytic converter, will harvest heat from gases that are nearly 1,300° F (700° C).

    Xu says current thermoelectric technology cannot withstand the temperatures inside catalytic converters, where gases are about 1,830° F (1,000° C). But researchers are working on new thermoelectrics capable of withstanding these high temperatures, a step that would allow greater fuel savings.

    The project begins Jan.1, and the initial prototype aims to reduce fuel consumption by 5%. Xu says future systems capable of working at higher temperatures could make possible a 10% reduction.

    The thermoelectric material is contained in chips a few inches square that will be tailored for their specific location within the system. “They are optimized to work best at different temperatures, which decrease as gas flows along the system,” Xu says in a statement.

    The researchers are tackling problems associated with the need to improve efficiency and reliability, integrate a complex mix of materials that might expand differently when heated and extract as much heat as possible from the exhaust gases.

    Thermoelectric materials generate electricity when there is a temperature difference.

    “The material is hot on the side facing the exhaust gases and cool on the other side, and this difference must be maintained to continually generate a current,” says Xu, who has been collaborating with GM in thermoelectric research for about a decade.

    A critical research goal is to develop materials that are poor heat conductors.

    “You don’t want heat to transfer rapidly from the hot side to the cool side of the chip,” Xu says. “You want to maintain the temperature difference to continuously generate current.”

    Researchers at GM are using a thermoelectric material called skutterudite, a mineral made of cobalt, arsenide, nickel or iron, he notes.

    “The biggest challenge is system-level design – how to optimize everything to get as much heat as possible from the exhaust gas,” Xu says. “The engine exhaust has to lose as much heat as possible to the material.”

    <img src=”http://subscribers.wardsauto.com/images/2010/11/purdue.jpg”>
    Purdue mechanical engineering doctoral student Yaguo Wang works with high-speed laser to study thermoelectric generators.

    Rare-earth elements, such as lanthanum, cesium, neodymium and erbium, reduce the thermal conductivity of skutterudite. The elements are mixed with skutterudite inside a furnace.

    Because using pure rare-earth elements is costly, researchers also are working to replace them with alloys called mischmetals.

    original article: http://wardsauto.com/ar/purdue_autoexhaust_fuel_101202/

    뉴욕시의 디젤버스와 CNG버스 비교 자료

    뉴욕시의 디젤버스와 CNG버스 비교 자료

    뉴욕시에서는 2000년대 초반부터 디젤하이브리드 버스운행

    뉴욕시에서는 2000년대 초반부터 디젤하이브리드 버스 시범운행 사업을 추진하여 여러 환경성 평가 및 연비 측정을 실시해 왔다. 부가적으로 기존 일반 디젤버스 뿐만아니라 CNG 버스에 대한 비교평가도 실시하였으며, 아래의 자료들은 그 결과를 요약한 것이다.
    우선 환경성 면에서 주요 규제 대상인 배출가스를 측정한 결과를 보면, DPF를 장착한 디젤 버스의 경우 CNG 버스와 비교하여 미세먼지(PM) 배출량이 거의 동등한 수준인 것을 볼 수 있다. 다만 질소산화물(NOx)의 배출량이 다소 큰 반면, 일산화탄소(CO)와 미연탄화수소(THC)의 경우에는 오히려 CNG 버스가 더 많이 배출되고 있음을 알 수 있다.

    다음으로는 장기간 연비 측정을 수행한 자료를 살펴보면, 기본적으로 디젤 버스가 CNG 버스보다 연비가 더 좋은 것을 알 수 있다. 계절에 따라 약간의 편차가 있긴 하지만, 대략 35% 가량은 더 좋다는 것을 확인할 수 있으며, 이 데이터는 실험실 조건이 아닌 실제로 차량이 시내주행을 하면서 장기간에 걸쳐 축적된 결과이므로 의미하는 바가 더 크다고 할 수 있다. 그리고, 디젤하이브리드 버스의 경우에도 일반 디젤 버스에 비하여 대략 30% 이상의 추가 연비 향상 결과를 확인할 수 있으므로, 하이브리드 시스템의 효과를 잘 보여주는 사례라고 할 수 있다.

    Original article: http://www.cleandiesel.co.kr/infor/tech_read.asp?id=12&pageNo=1&searchpart=&search=&mykeyword