Energy Management of Hydrogen Hybrid Electric Vehicles -- A Potential Study
David Theodor Machacek, Nazim Ozan Yazar, Thomas Huber, Christopher, Harald Onder

TL;DR
This study explores the energy management of hydrogen hybrid electric vehicles, demonstrating that a mixed H2-HEV architecture can significantly reduce NOx emissions and hydrogen consumption through optimized EMS calibration, without hardware modifications.
Contribution
It introduces a dedicated energy management strategy for mixed H2-HEVs that achieves over 90% NOx emission reduction and 16% hydrogen savings compared to non-hybrid vehicles.
Findings
Mixed H2-HEV reduces engine-out NOx by over 90%.
Hydrogen consumption decreases by over 16%.
Emissions are minimized solely through EMS calibration.
Abstract
The hydrogen combustion engine (HICE) is known to be able to burn H under ultra-lean conditions, while producing no CO emissions and extremely low engine-out NO emissions. Immediate goals, as for instance the upcoming EURO 7 NO limitations, can be reached more easily as extremely low engine-out NO emissions facilitate the reduction of the overall tailpipe NO emissions. In this work, the feasibility of achieving consistent reductions in NO emissions through the implementation of electric hybridization of an HICE-equipped passenger car (H-HEV), combined with a dedicated energy management strategy (EMS) is discussed. In particular, the mixed H-HEV architecture is investigated and compared to a series H-HEV, a parallel H-HEV, and a base H-vehicle, which is only equipped with an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectric and Hybrid Vehicle Technologies · Vehicle emissions and performance · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
MethodsBalanced Selection
