http://phys.org/news/2014-09-electric-vehicle-energy-percent.html
Cutting electric vehicle energy use 51 percent
[2014-09-09] by Sean Nealon

A vehicle navigation tool created at UC Riverside can cut electric vehicle
energy use up to 51 percent. Credit: Luis Sanz 

(Phys.org) —Researchers at the University of California, Riverside's Bourns
College of Engineering have shown that a vehicle navigation tool they
created can cut electric vehicle energy use up to 51 percent. 

The researchers tested the "eco-routing" navigation system – which takes
into account real-time traffic information, road type and road grade – on
three routes around Riverside. Using road testing and computer simulations,
they studied three types of navigation systems: shortest distance, least
time and least energy.

They found:
Energy savings between 25 percent and 51 percent when they took the route
that the navigation system said would take the least amount of time. The
tradeoff is that the travel distance increased between three percent and 19
percent.

Energy saving between five percent and 25 percent when they took the
shortest distance route. But, the time tradeoffs were sometimes significant,
ranging from 8 percent to 96 percent.

However, taking the least energy route without any constraint on travel time
did not make sense in some cases, because the increasing in time can be as
high as 186 percent. At the same time, the route distance may increase by
about 16 percent.

The researchers, who are part of the Bourns College of Engineering Center
for Environmental Research and Technology, outlined their findings in a
report to the California Energy Commission, which paid for the study with a
$95,000 grant. The researchers are: Guoyuan Wu, an assistant research
engineer; Matthew Barth, the director of the research center; and Kanok
Boriboonsomsin, an associate research engineer.

Past research by these UC Riverside engineers has shown that the eco-routing
navigation systems can potentially reduce fuel consumption and greenhouse
gas emissions from conventional fossil fuel-powered vehicles by five percent
to 15 percent.

For electric vehicles, the benefits of the eco-routing navigation system go
beyond energy and emission savings. The technology can cut down so-called
"range anxiety," meaning the driver of an electric vehicle fearing he or she
won't be able to complete a trip without running out of electricity to power
the car's battery. 

In the last decade, there has been a proliferation of GPS-guided navigation
systems that assist drivers on which routes to take. Most attempt to
minimize distance traveled. However, shortest distance doesn't always
minimize energy consumption and emissions because of factors such as heavily
congested roadway sections.

Newer generation navigation systems take into account speed limits and even
real-time traffic conditions and provide drivers the shortest-duration
routes, which may have vehicles travel longer distances, albeit on less
congested roadways. However, traveling at high speeds for longer distances
may result in higher energy consumption and emissions compared to a more
direct route at lower speeds. This is due to factors such as stronger
aerodynamic drag force at higher speeds and steep road grades.

A few electric vehicle navigation systems, in cars such as the Ford Focus
and Honda Fit, offer an eco-routing function. However, the algorithms
underlying the eco-route calculation in these systems are proprietary and
not publicly available. In addition, to the best of the UC Riverside
research teams' knowledge, they don't have the capability to incorporate
real-time traffic information, road type or road grade.

With the California Energy Commission funding, the UC Riverside researchers
conducted more than 100 trips on the road from March 2013 to July 2013 using
a 2013 Nissan Leaf. They selected three origin-destination pairs designed to
provide different driving route options because of real-time traffic
conditions and variables such as road grade and road type. The routes varied
in distance from 18.6 miles to 23.2 miles.

After incorporating the data from the road tests into the eco-routing
navigation system algorithm, the researchers conducted more than 4,000 trips
with the same destination points but by using a numerical simulation.

"The significant saving in energy consumption, compared to conventional
navigation systems, indicate our system, with some future adjustments, has
significant potential for commercialization," said Wu, who was the principal
investigator on the project.
[© phys.org]
...
http://www.inlandnewstoday.com/story.php?s=34780
'Eco-routing' saves electric vehicle energy




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