
Industry News
Controlled Power Technologies promotes electric superchargers for small engines
23rd May 2008
A low cost technical solution to soaring fuel prices could be as simple as electric superchargers boosting the performance of small internal combustion engines, says the UK CO2 emissions specialist Controlled Power Technologies (CPT) whose micro-hybrid technologies are designed to support the transition from current powertrains to the still distant mass market adoption of affordable mild hybrid vehicles. Nick Pascoe,,chief executive of CPT, addressed this downsizing issue at the JSAE (Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan) international annual congress held in Yokohama this week.
Pascoe says, “Engine downsizing has been shown to be one of the most cost effective routes to vehicle CO2 reduction and European carmakers are already moving rapidly towards a 30% reduction in the displacement of their mid-sized engines to around 1.4 to 1.6 litre capacity, offering the potential to deliver up to 15% reduction in CO2 emissions.
“The US market is also now taking CO2 reduction seriously and viewing the option of perhaps a 40% reduction in spark ignition engine displacement. This will be achieved through integrating advanced boosting technologies into optimised induction and exhaust systems, as a potential alternative to embracing higher cost low emission diesel engines. Asian and other markets, where small displacement spark ignition engines already dominate, are well placed to take this trend to extremes.
“This global downsizing trend will only succeed, however, if the technology is cost effective and the driving experience still satisfies the mass market consumer. Therefore market success for the car makers will ultimately be influenced by their ability to maintain or improve vehicle driveability at the lowest possible total system cost."
Pascoe says his company has simple and cost-effective solutions available that can prevent boosting systems becoming more complex and expensive than the engine itself. Its production-ready variable torque enhancement system (VTES) for example, provides full boost within 350 milliseconds and significantly improves low speed torque response for naturally-aspirated or turbocharged gasoline and diesel engines.
VTES can be implemented on current vehicles, using existing 12 volt electrical architecture, and is claimed to be more cost effective than any equivalent mild hybrid solution.
In essence, the CPT VTES system employs an electric motor driving a supercharger compressor to provide a charge of air to the engine for short periods, when the driving conditions demand it. The transient boost increases engine torque at low engine speeds. When used in series with a conventional turbocharger, the 2kW of electrical power typically translates into 20kW at the crankshaft. The drain on the battery is minimal and its charge soon restored by the engine alternator.
“When correctly matched to the engine, VTES can dramatically increase the air charge density over the critical first 10 combustion cycles of a low speed transient operation, delivering real improvements in both torque and emissions performance, where it matters most,” says Pascoe.
CPT products also include a stop-start system now moving close to production readiness and an exhaust energy recovery system in an advanced stage of development.
The CPT ‘SpeedStart12’ stop-start system can crank up to 2.8-litre gasoline or 2.0-litre diesel engines, also using standard 12 volt architecture. It packages into the space of a typical alternator and all electronics are integrated into the unit. Its switched reluctance motor provides the power density to re-start an engine within 400 milliseconds, the start time necessary for a driver to perceive a dependable ‘instant’ re-start. It also provides very efficient power generation, achieving up to 3kW with up to 80% efficiency.
“There is also a tremendous incentive to minimise or recover the energy rejected by the engine as heat,” says Pascoe. “One of the main sources of waste heat is exhaust gas with approximately 30% of the hydro-carbon fuel energy used by a vehicle lost down the exhaust pipe. Although some of the exhaust can be used to power a turbocharger at certain points in the operating cycle, and heat is required to operate a catalyst, there is still plenty of energy worth recovering.
“Our TIGERS product is again based on a very efficient switched reluctance motor operating as a generator and sized to produce up to 6kW of power. This level of power generation can be used either to meet the growing power requirement of future cars or to boost the crankshaft power available.”
“Switched reluctance motors are well suited to the requirements of the automotive industry,” says Pascoe. “They can be produced for high volume series production at low cost; they are manufactured mostly from easy-to-recycle steel, copper and aluminium and avoid the use of exotic, expensive and heat sensitive materials. These compact motors are easy to package and offer excellent energy efficiency and controllability.”
Controlled Power Technologies has secured an exclusive licence from Switched Reluctance Drives Ltd. to develop its unique electric motor technology for the automotive sector. SR Drives is a UK company based in Harrogate and wholly owned subsidiary of Emerson Electric Company, a Fortune 500 company.
Controlled Power Technologies itself was created a year ago as a management buy-in funded by venture capital, and recently completed the acquisition of its portfolio of near-term product solutions to the problem of automotive CO2 reduction.