Development of techniques for the minimization of fuel consumption in road vehicles via optimal scheduling of velocity and gear shifting with known road data
Abstract
This thesis, deals with the problem of reducing fuel consumption of conventional
road vehicles, with major emphasis on medium and heavy duty
commercial trucks equipped with conventional powertrains. The main
idea is the exploitation of technologies already available to guarantee
large di usion of the proposed techniques and high impact on a short
time horizon.
The knowledge of the characteristics of the road to drive stretches
the paradigm of energy saving from the power generation within the
vehicle alone, towards the exploitation of this additional information for
fuel consumption minimization. The goal is to exploit this information,
in particular road grade or elevation for modulating vehicle speed and
optimizing gear shifts. The key is to deliver mechanical power available
in a fashion that maximises the nal objective of transportation: elapsed
distance.
Nowadays, one of the approaches used to pursue this objective is to
perform an instantaneous optimization, based on either some optimality
or heuristic principle. On the other hand, the vast majority of the approaches
presented in literature, formulate and solve an optimal control
problem. Its solution can be approached using optimal control methods
or dynamic programming, although at the price of dealing with a potentially
prohibitive computational load if suitable model assumptions and
simpli cations are not made. ... [edited by Author]