Assessment of Waste Heat Recovery for Heavy Duty Vehicles during on-road operation
Waste Heat Recovery (WHR) by means of an Organic Rankine Cycle is a technology often proposed to reduce the fuel consumption and CO2 emissions of heavy-duty vehicles. A Class 5 Heavy Lorry (tractor) with a WHR system was measured over various driving cycles on the chassis dyno and under realistic conditions on the road, performing each test-cycle with WHR enabled and disabled. The use of WHR lead to reductions in fuel consumption of 3.1% over the World Harmonized Vehicle Cycle, 2.5% over the Regional Delivery Cycle (RDC) and 1.9% over the on-road trips. The WHR system was able to produce more power output during the RDC on the chassis dyno compared to the on-road trips, as more exhaust energy was available during the RDC, resulting in a more considerable reduction of the fuel consumption. No statistically significant reduction of the pollutant emissions was observed. On-road trips were simulated with the Vehicle Energy Consumption calculation Tool, (VECTO), and the fuel consumption was predicted with an error of less than 1.5% for the individual trips and less than 0.5% when averaged over the different repetitions. These findings demonstrate the capability of VECTO to
accurately simulate vehicles with Waste Heat Recovery under realistic conditions on the road.
BROEKAERT Stijn;
GRIGORATOS Theodoros;
SAVVIDIS Dimitrios;
FONTARAS Georgios;
2021-04-06
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
JRC122043
1359-4311 (online),
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1359431121003392,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC122043,
10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2021.116891 (online),
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