Volkswagen announces power-train roadmap toward oil free future
Filed under: Emerging Technologies, Volkswagen
Volkswagen has published their power-train roadmap for the coming decade with the goal of moving to a petroleum-free future. Clearly in the near term, fossil fuels are still the primary fuel so they need to be used as sparingly as possible. To that end, VW is putting a lot of effort into their gasoline direct injection systems (TSI), turbo-diesels (TDI), and dual clutch gearboxes (DSG). These modern internal combustion technologies will also be combined with electric motors in new hybrid power-trains. The diesels are also being enhanced with the BlueTec emissions control technology they've licensed from Mercedes. The next step is replacing the fossil fuels with biofuels, especially cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel. The intent is to make the fuels carbon neutral so that no more CO2 is generated from combustion than is absorbed during growth of the biomass feed-stocks. Longer term, Volkswagen is working on high-temperature fuel cells. They believe that the low-temperature fuel cells used by everyone else don't have any future, but they have come up with something different. According to Prof. Dr. Jürgen Leohold, Director of Volkswagen Corporate Research: "The high-temperature fuel cell will make the total system in the car lighter, more compact, durable and economical." They expect to start testing their new fuel cell design in vehicles in 2009, but don't foresee production before 2020.
The full VW press release is after the jump.
[Source: Volkswagen]
TO THE POINT: DRIVING THE FUTURE - TODAY, TOMORROW AND BEYOND
The roadmap to an epoch free of oil
Wolfsburg - Volkswagen's engine strategy integrates highly innovative technologies on the way via the fuel cell to pure electrical traction.
TDI, TSI and DSG are the most efficient types of powertrains today.
Clean TDI engines will satisfy the strictest emissions laws in the world.
CCS will prove to be a key technology for a society independent of oil.
High temperature fuel cells could deliver a breakthrough for engines powered by hydrogen at the end of the next decade.
* Growing shortages of fossil fuels and an environment that needs protecting more than ever before, all set new challenges for automobile producers of a magnitude unheard of in the past. At the same time however it is precisely these challenges that can conceal undreamt of opportunities. That is because the roadmap to the future of individual mobility will be defined over the next decade. An exciting future. Companies like Volkswagen will be the driving force behind this progress. These are large companies whose growth in an era of fossil-based resources was fueled by their products yet also created the potential for overcoming dependency on these non-renewable resources by long-range research. One thing is that is already clear today is that in the future a number of systems will coexist side-by-side. Dr. (Engineering) Rudolf Krebs, Director of Volkswagen Powertrain Development comments: "I am firmly convinced that both today's technologies and those currently in development such as TDI, TSI and DSG will endure for a long time. Advanced internal combustion engine developments, in part supported by e-motors, pure e-powertrains and fuel cells will coexist side-by-side to satisfy all customer wishes." At the end of this evolutionary chain there is one goal, as already mentioned: Independence from fossil-based resources.
Fossil fuels must be utilized as efficiently as possible
* In the first stage on the path to this independence what is important is to utilize existing fossil fuels as efficiently as at all possible. This first stage represents the foundation of the automotive needs pyramid. It is the era in which gasoline and diesel engines are made, by means of intelligent downsizing, to utilize fuels as economically and with as few emissions as possible while simultaneously offering a full measure of dynamics and comfort. This is the present, today. Volkswagen is putting its mark on the present with vehicles like the Polo BlueMotion, the most fuel-efficient five-seater in the world, a universally fuel-efficient fleet of TDI engines, highly efficient and unique TSI engines (twin chargers) in the Golf und Touran, successful natural gas vehicles (EcoFuel) and a range of models that still leaves plenty of room for fulfilling automotive dreams.
BLUETEC and Clean TDI
* These base technologies are already being further refined. New powertrains, including the engine concept developed by Volkswagen under the working title "Clean TDI" for use in the USA, are already in the prototype stage. These engines will satisfy the strictest emissions laws in the world – even the so-called Tier2 Bin5 in California.
* The "Clean TDI" engines are an important component of the BLUETEC Offensive kicked off at the end of November in Los Angeles by the three German car producers Audi, Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen. The goal of this partnership is to establish the BLUETEC concept as a universal symbol for clean and fuel efficient cars and SUVs with diesel engines. By the way, the first Clean TDI celebrated its world premiere in the Tiguan concept car that was presented in parallel to the BLUETEC Offensive at the Los Angeles Auto Show.
SunFuel® could already replace gasoline and diesel even today
* The next important step on the way to the future is obtaining fuels from renewable raw materials. SunFuel that is produced from biomass and cellulose-ethanol is a second generation biofuel. The focus here has shifted specifically to the use of CO2-neutral biomass feedstocks that can be used to generate these synthetic fuels. Because SunFuel® is produced from renewable raw materials such as biomass, when it is burned the amount of carbon dioxide released is equivalent to the amount originally removed from the atmosphere by the plants supplying the energy. When used as a fuel in conventional diesel engines, the extremely high-grade and clean SunFuel® reduces particulate emissions by almost 30 percent and can also be used in older vehicles without technical modifications. Moreover, simple adjustments to the engine controller (ignition timing and injection volume) are sufficient to also reduce NOx emissions (nitrogen oxides) by up to 30 percent.
SunFuel® as basis for the engine of the future: CCS
* Simultaneously SunFuel® is the internal combustion fuel for the next stage of powertrain and fuel strategy that involves using entirely new combustion engines that can be run with renewable fuels and used worldwide without requiring any larger modifications to the infrastructure. The reason: By applying the principles of homogenization the highly pure SunFuel® paves the way for intensive advanced development of the diesel combustion process leading to the combined combustion system (CCS). Synthetic fuels like SunFuel® help to prepare the way for an upcoming generation of engines – and a key technology on the road toward the end of the oil age. That is because CCS will combine the superior fuel efficiency of a diesel engine with the exhaust gas quality of a gasoline engine.
Wherever it makes sense Volkswagen will also utilize hybrid technology
* The current priority, because it is more effective, is to offer large numbers of TDI and TSI engines at economical prices to realize their immediate benefits with regard to oil consumption and emissions. However, along the path to the future Volkswagen will continue to research and further develop all potential engine types and introduce them as soon as it makes sense and is technically feasible. These include hybrid powertrain systems, such as the one Volkswagen presented very recently in the form of a Touran prototype with its highly efficient combination of a gasoline engine derived from the TSI engine, electric drive and dual clutch transmission (DSG).
High temperature fuel cell points the way to the future
* The extent of Volkswagen's innovative power in researching new technologies becomes apparent when one considers the fuel cell. Volkswagen Research has developed a high-temperature fuel cell (HTFC) in a form that is unique worldwide. It overcomes the numerous disadvantages of previous low-temperature fuel cells (LTFC) that are implemented in nearly all vehicle types with this type of powertrain system; mid-term plans for production vehicles with such systems are currently being announced by some car producers in publicity surrounding the Los Angeles Auto Show. Prof. Dr. Jürgen Leohold, Director of Volkswagen Corporate Research: "The high-temperature fuel cell will make the total system in the car lighter, more compact, durable and economical. And those are the decisive criteria for advancing the fuel cell in the direction of large-scale production." Prof. Dr. Leohold continues: "We believe that the future belongs to the high temperature fuel cell. On the other hand, we do not give much credence to the chances of the low temperature fuel cell."
* Volkswagen assumes that the first prototypes with high temperature fuel cells will begin trials in 2009. The first production vehicles, based on current forecasts, will not arrive on the market before the year 2020. The route we take to get there will not just be contested in the arena of hybrid vehicles.
The terms FSI, TDI, TSI and DSG are registered trademarks of Volkswagen AG or other companies of the Volkswagen Group in Germany.












Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
12-20-2006 @ 12:56PM
C said...
Uhhh... What about battery electric cars? WTF? Am I the only idiot that still doesn't understand why the car companies just don't do this already?
And don't give me crap about the batteries not being good enough yet. I got a 100+ mile range in my EV1 6 years ago. This was good enough for me, and a good fraction of the rest of the world's population. At least offer the option.
C
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12-20-2006 @ 2:43PM
kballs said...
I agree with C. Hydrogen continues to be proven only about 1/3 as efficient as battery powered cars because as an energy storage medium it takes too much energy in the conversion process... not to mention you need batteries in your wonderful hydrogen fuel-cell car anyway because the fuel cell can't "rev up" when you stomp on the throttle.
It seems like every car company and politician is waxing up hydrogen fuel cells just to improve their own image (by making us feel good about their current environmentally unfriendly cars just because the company is "working on" futuristic green technology). Most of these car companies allocate almost no engineering resources to these projects, keeping them in the closet and dusting them off once in a while to remind us that they "are working on green tech so it's okay to love them"... this includes the poster children Toyota and Honda. They're all pulling the wool over our eyes and I'm tired of hearing about how the future looks so bright. Every 10-15 years they tell us how "green tech is only 10-15 years away", and here we are 10-15 years later with the same gas guzzlers.
I just hope nothing horrible happens to companies like Tesla Motors (like being bought out to have the products killed), they are the only thing that can prove that consumers demand EVs and PHEVs and that the car companies can't just tell us what we want.
For those that think hydrogen is better because you can fill it up away from home, think again. There are far more places with electrical outlets than hydrogen outlets. The newest batteries can often be charged in a few minutes (with the proper charging equipment). You could use an electric vehicle for your daily trips less than 100 miles and retain an ICE vehicle for long trips. There is also the possibility for plugin series hybrids (PSHEV) that run on batteries most of the time but have a backup generator for when the batteries get low (for longer trips).
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12-21-2006 @ 1:17AM
CM said...
High temperature fuel cell car upside:
Might cost a little less than PEM fuel cells, they require less platinum.
May be able to run on natural gas or other hydrocarbon fuels, eliminating the hydrogen storage problem.
High temperature fuel cell car downside:
They still cost much more than Lithium batteries.
Very slow startup, especially in cold weather.
Less efficient, due to increased heat loss and need to maintain high operating temperatures.
Less efficient than batteries.
If run on hydrogen, it has all the problems of hydrogen fuel.
By the time they figure out the future is electric, it may be too late.
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