ee2sea
Electrical
- Jun 21, 2011
- 6
While I posted this in the Marine/Ocean Engineering Forum for general comments, I would most appreciate any comments of specific electrical difficulties with these new hybrid type diesel electric systems being proposed by both Siemens and ABB. See here:
The whole key to the fuel savings is primarily variable speed operation of the diesels and thus AC gens. Does that imply that the DC bus would have to be a variable DC value or could it still be fixed? With respect to transmission problems such as harmonics, would the "front-end" portion attached to these variable speed generators likely have to operate as an AFE?
I believe wind power has used some elements of this? Does this system exist at all in other hybrid vehicles? Other examples in process industries with a DC bus usually mean a DC bus derived from a fixed frequency, fixed-voltage source, ie a utility. Assume that is a totally different beast. Would the stored energy of this larger "vehicle" system require (lithium-based) batteries or would ultra-capacitors still be feasible?
The whole idea is very exciting to me but would appreciate any ideas on the electrical difficulties it may run into.
The whole key to the fuel savings is primarily variable speed operation of the diesels and thus AC gens. Does that imply that the DC bus would have to be a variable DC value or could it still be fixed? With respect to transmission problems such as harmonics, would the "front-end" portion attached to these variable speed generators likely have to operate as an AFE?
I believe wind power has used some elements of this? Does this system exist at all in other hybrid vehicles? Other examples in process industries with a DC bus usually mean a DC bus derived from a fixed frequency, fixed-voltage source, ie a utility. Assume that is a totally different beast. Would the stored energy of this larger "vehicle" system require (lithium-based) batteries or would ultra-capacitors still be feasible?
The whole idea is very exciting to me but would appreciate any ideas on the electrical difficulties it may run into.