| ▲ | dylan604 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Train locomotives have used diesel powered generators that then powers electric motors. Would this be less efficient than battery powered EVs? Or better asked, what would be the most efficient use of gasoline? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | csours an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> Would this be less efficient than battery powered EVs? Measured in terms of mass * distance, trains with steel wheels will beat anything with rubber pneumatic tires. Part of the magic of hybrid trains is that you can have multiple generation units that can be turned on or off as needed. --- Efficiency is just one consideration for a power plant. Historically, reliability has been more important than efficiency, especially for industrial applications like locomotives. In other words, locomotives are probably not as efficient as they could be. For instance, you could use a lower viscosity engine oil for lubrication, but that would reduce reliability as engines fail due to friction. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ZeroGravitas an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nissan makes a range of these under the e-power branding: https://www.nissan-global.com/EN/INNOVATION/TECHNOLOGY/ARCHI... | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | jfengel an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
When it comes to the environment the most efficient use is to leave it in the ground. Hybrids work for trains because they are so large and don't need big swings of acceleration or to climb steep grades. They can run the diesel generators at maximum efficiency. Battery power would be better, because you can build even larger power plants running at higher heats and not have to haul them with you, but the costs of sufficient battery is too large, so far. That is changing. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | MerrimanInd 31 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
That's a complicated question that unfortunately has quite a bit of "well it depends" in the answer. I worked in the auto industry for a long time - both doing engine development and EVs - so my opinions here are well-informed but not world expert. From a pure energy efficiency perspective you can't beat economies of scale. A stationary power plant (even ones that are just big gasoline engines) run at a constant load and RPM so they can be optimized for pure efficiency, they rarely have to start, warm up, and shut down, and they can use larger and more expensive exhaust aftertreatment systems. Most energy conversions grow more efficient with scale and this is no different. The locomotive powertrain works for a handful of reasons but one of them is you can build much more efficient engines that are optimized for a single constant speed and load. But most of the advancements in internal combustion engines over the last 20-30 years don't increase peak efficiency but increase the conditions in which they're efficient. Variable valve timing and lift are probably the most underrated and overpowered technologies that have transformed engines from having one narrow regime of high efficiency to running well over a huge range of the map. But turbocharging, variable intake geometries, 7+ speed transmissions, and mild hybrid systems like belt-starter-generators get honorable mentions here. However we're not talking about anything close to EV-levels of efficiency. I think the cutting edge research engines are running in the mid to high 40s for thermal efficiency (percentage of fuel energy captured as useful work), most passenger car engines probably peak in the mid 30s. So while there is some efficiency to be gained by a more locomotive-style system it's not as much as you would hope. In the industry that's called a series hybrid system, vs a parallel hybrid system where either ICE or EV power can go to the wheels. The benefits of a series system are more emissions and product features. You can get the full torque and power of an EV, you can start and stop the IC engine in a more emissions optimized way, and and you can filter load spikes to use a small engine that meets average not peak load. From a more pragmatic perspective, with the energy density of gasoline and other liquid fuels it's probably best to use it in applications for which you just can't use full electrification. Planes are currently the best example of this. It's also worth noting that passenger cars benefit massively from strong hybridization because of the uneven load cycles so that's a technology where you can deploy a gasoline engine but then claw back a lot of the efficiency losses with hybrids. That's not always true, for example boats don't really have a regen cycle so hybridization just doesn't get much. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||