Title: Making the Hybrid Electric Ground Vehicle Decision
1Making the Hybrid Electric Ground Vehicle
Decision 6th Annual Defense Attachés Technology
Forum 14 June 2007
Todd Turner Deputy Director for Air and Ground
Systems (Acting) Office of the Assistant
Secretary of the Army for Research Technology
2Science Technology for a Campaign Quality Army
with Joint Expeditionary Capabilities
Future Force
Current Force
Enabling the Future Force
Science and Technology develop and mature
technology to enable transformational
capabilities for the Future Modular Force while
seeking opportunities to accelerate technology
directly into the Current Modular Force
lt 40 lb. load
100 lb. load
Limited network
Fully networked
gt 70 tons
lt 30 tons
Enhancing the Current Force
lt 10 mph
gt 40 mph
3Power Technologies for DoDEPTI OSD Energy
Power Technology Initiative
OSD Energy and Power Technologies
Initiative (2002-present)
More Electric Aircraft
Electric Warship
Space Based Radar
ENERGY STORAGE
Power Needs
POWER CONTROL AND DISTRIBUTION
FY02 FY12
Warrior
- Switching Conditioning
- Power Transmission Distribution
- Thermal Management
Hybrid/Electric Combat Vehicle
New Operational Capabilities
Electric/Hybrid Weapons
4US Army Capabilities and Technical Challenges for
Future Ground Vehicles
- Reduction in size weight (10)
- Increase in power at wheels (gt50)
- Improved fuel efficiency (15-25)
- Integrated power management for efficiency, fuel
savings - Peak power for rapid acceleration with smaller
engine - Reduction in fuel re-supply logistics (10)
- Advanced energy storage for Silent Watch / Silent
Mobility - More energy for onboard equipment, exportable
power - Integrated thermal management (engine, electric
machines, power conditioning)
5Enabling component technologies where are we
today?
- Transition Opportunities?
- Joint lightweight Tactical Vehicle (JLTV)
- Future Combat Systems (FCS)
- Re-power/Block Upgrades
- Global War on Terrorism (GWOT)
- Rapid Equipping Force (REF)
Impact on fuel economy and efficiency will be
realized only when technologies are transitioned
and incorporated into systems
6Transition Opportunities
7Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEVs) Will they save
fuel? If so, how much? Issues?
- Business case for HEVs not solidly established
for military applications to justify increased
cost over vehicles with conventional drive trains
- Army ST, partnered with PEO CSCSS and Army Test
Evaluation Center, is conducting instrumented
tests to address business case and issues - Fuel consumption in HEVs is heavily dependent on
driving cycles, mission profiles and operational
environment - Test Evaluation
- Standard tests for fuel usage do not represent
typical vehicle use profiles - Test Operating Procedures favor conventional
mechanical drive vehicles - Energy Storage
- The most compact batteries are very expensive -
affordability issues for Acquisition community - Different applications/configurations favor
different battery types - Military solutions generally need high energy
density AND power density - Low Technical Maturity
Warfighting capability is the driver for military
user. Cost and maturity are deterrents to
acquisition deciders.
8Developing Test Operating Procedure (TOP) for
HEVs the Challenges
- Establishing procedures for mission profile-based
test and evaluation - Identifying a capabilities baseline and
ensuring that baseline is not compromised during
testing. - Identifying adaptive test and evaluation
procedures that address varying mission profile
conditions - Identifying processes by which all configurations
and control strategies of hybrid propulsion
systems can be tested to yield comparable,
normalized results - Development of a feasible and achievable field
procedure to address fuel energy equivalent
conversion to electrical energy storage based
upon multiple data points - Quantification of degradation and/or non-constant
capacity of secondary energy storage system - Evaluation for inclusion and definition of new
types of transient cycles that accentuate hybrid
propulsion benefits of dynamic over-the-road
fuel economy - Quantification of the fuel equivalent component
of power requirements for on-board equipment
loads (for both mobility and non-mobility loads)
9Path forward - What's possible? The Fuel
Efficiency Ground Vehicle Demonstrator
Description
- Survey Government and Industry to identify and
harvest opportunities in fuel efficient
technologies, lightweight components, and fuel
efficient vehicles - Leverage Government and Industry MS capabilities
to build a virtual vehicle to predict
performance, set objectives and establish test
criteria - Demonstrate decreased fuel consumption, without
decreasing performance or capability, in a
tactical vehicle using innovative design,
advanced lightweight materials and fuel efficient
components.
Demonstrate decreased fuel demand, without
decreasing capability. Goal is 30 fuel reduction
Funding Requirements
Benefits/Metrics
- ROI over Army light tactical vehicle fleet is
approximately 51 based on usage of 4000 miles
per vehicle per year. - Every 1000 lbs in weight savings over baseline
HMMWV results in a nominal .5-1 mpg highway
fuel savings (Baseline is 8mpg_at_45mph)
Army Supporting Investment (PB-08)
Baseline is Heavy HMMWV
10US Army ST
Engine of Transformation