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Driving cycle

A driving cycle is a series of data points representing the speed of a vehicle versus time.

Driving cycles are produced by different countries and organizations to assess the performance of vehicles in various ways, for example, fuel consumption, electric vehicle autonomy and polluting emissions.[1][2][3]

Fuel consumption and emission tests are performed on chassis dynamometers. Tailpipe emissions are collected and measured to indicate the performance of the vehicle.

Another use for driving cycles is in vehicle simulations. For example, they are used in propulsion system simulations to predict performance of internal combustion engines, transmissions, electric drive systems, batteries, fuel cell systems, and similar components.

Some driving cycles are derived theoretically, as in the European Union, whereas others are direct measurements of a representative driving pattern.

There are two types of driving cycles:

  1. Transient driving cycles involve many changes, representing the constant speed changes typical of on-road driving.
  2. Modal driving cycles involve protracted periods at constant speeds.

The American FTP-75,[4] and the unofficial European Hyzem driving cycles are transient, whereas the Japanese 10-15 Mode and JC08 cycles are modal cycles.

Some highly stylized modal driving cycles such as the European NEDC were designed to fit a particular requirement, but bear little relation to real world driving patterns.[5] On the contrary, the current Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP) strives to mimic real world driving behavior. The most common driving cycles are the WLTP, NEDC, SORDS and the FTP-75, the latter corresponding to urban driving conditions solely.

Driving cycle design is the core technology for these standard cycles.[clarification needed] Optimization and Markov chains are employed to design a driving cycle.[citation needed]

Drive cycle recognition applies to Hybrid Electric Vehicle.[clarification needed]

History edit

1960s edit

At the end of the 1960s, increased use of automobile vehicles led to the first regulations on limiting emissions. They first showed up in Germany and then in France, which led to the common Directive 70/220/EEC in March 1970:[6]

  • On 18 October 1968 was published, a 14 October 1968 regulation amended the Straßenverkehrs-Zulassungs-Ordnung in Germany with provisions on measures to be taken against air pollution by positive-ignition engines of motor vehicles, to enter into force on 1 October 1970;
  • On 17 May 1969 was published in the Journal officiel a 31 March 1969 regulation on the "Composition of exhaust gases emitted from petrol engines of motor vehicles", applicable from 1971 or 1972.[7]

This led to a risk to have different national regulation in different member states of the European Economic Community (EEC). To avoid this and to protect the common market, all member states adopts the same requirements, either in addition to or in place of their existing rules, in order to allow the EEC-type approval procedure, defined by Council Directive in 1970.[7]

1970s edit

On 1 August 1970, United Nations Regulation No. 15. was registered by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN-ECE), for vehicles equipped with a positive-ignition engine or with a compression-ignition engine with regard to the emission of gaseous pollutants by the engine—a method of measuring the power of positive-ignition engines and a method of measuring the fuel consumption of vehicles.[8] This UN-ECE regulation number 15 had three kind of tests performed with octane 99:

  • Operating cycle used for TYPE-I TEST, up to 50 km/h speed in third gear and up to 1.04 meter per second squared acceleration[9]
  • TYPE-II TEST: Carbon-monoxide emission test at idling speed
  • TYPE-III TEST: Verifying emissions of crank-case gases[9]

In 1978, an Energy Tax Act mandated new testing[10] in order to determine the rate of the guzzler tax that applies for the sales of new cars. This testing, the EPA Federal Test Procedure, commonly known as FTP-75 for the city driving cycle, is a series of tests defined by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to measure tailpipe emissions and fuel economy of passenger cars (excluding light trucks and heavy-duty vehicles).

In 1983, in the European Union, directive 83/351/EEC amended directive 70/220/EEC against air pollution by gases from positive-ignition engines of motor vehicles, in conformity with ECE Regulation No. 15/04.[11]

1980s, NEDC edit

In the 1980s, the old NEDC as European homologation lab-bench procedure was established to simulate urban driving condition of a passenger car.[12]

In 1988, in the EEC, Directive 88/76/EEC, change law to rules more stringent than ECE Regulation 15/04.[11]

1990s edit

In 1992 the NEDC was updated to include also a non-urban path (characterized by medium to high speeds). In 1997 the CO2 emission figure have been added, too.[13]

The structure of the NEDC is characterized by an average speed of 34 km/h, the accelerations are smooth, stops are few and prolonged and top speed is 120 km/h.[14]

In 1996, in the USA, the EPA revised the vehicle certification test, to introduce new driving conditions including aggressive driving behavior, high acceleration rates or air conditioners' operation:[15] The new test introduces:

  • speeds of 80 mph (129 km/h) instead of 57 mph (92 km/h).
  • control of emissions during aggressive accelerations
  • effect of air conditioners on nitrogen oxide

2000s edit

In 2007, the EPA added three new Supplemental Federal Test Procedure (SFTP) tests[16] that combine the current city and highway cycles to reflect real world fuel economy more accurately,. Estimates are available for vehicles back to the 1985 model year.[4][17]

In 2008, the US procedure has been updated and includes four tests: city driving (the FTP-75 proper), highway driving (HWFET), aggressive driving (SFTP US06), and optional air conditioning test (SFTP SC03).

2010s edit

Nowadays, the NEDC cycle has become outdated, since it is not representative of the modern driving styles, since nowadays the distances and road variety a mean car has to face have changed.[18][19]

From 1 September 2019 all the light duty vehicles that are to be registered in the EU countries (but also in Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Turkey) must comply with the WLTP standards, part of the Global regulations:[20] In the European Union, including UK, the WLTP replaces the NEDC.

2020s, CATC edit

On 2019-10-18, the China automotive test cycles (CATC) are released (GB/T 38146).[21][22] CATC are concluded from a research covering over 17 vehicle models, 2.5 million data inputs, 700 thousand car owners and 31 provinces in China. On 2020-05-01 CATC are into effect.

Data Collection edit

Data collection from the test road is the most important activity. Test road (e.g. city, highway, etc.) measured data are the inputs to the 'Drive Cycle' preparation activity.

The procedure involves instrumentation of the test vehicle to collect information while driving on the test road. There are two major types of data to be collected, Driver Behavior data and Vehicle versus Road data. The Vehicle versus Road data are used to prepare the road drive cycle and the Driver Behavior data to prepare the Driver model. For example, to calculate a vehicle's fuel consumption either in computer simulation or in chassis dynamo-meter which is going to be launched in India, it must run on an Indian road with an Indian Driver. Indian Drive Cycle with a European driver model does not give a fair comparison of the on road trials.

Driving Cycle Design edit

The "Drive-cycle" basically is the representative of the road. Drive cycles are used to reduce the expense of on road tests, time of test and fatigue of the test engineer. The whole idea is to bring the road to the test lab (a chassis dynamo-meter) or to the computer simulation.

Two kinds of drive cycle can be made. One is DISTANCE DEPENDENT (SPEED versus DISTANCE versus ALTITUDE) and the other one is TIME DEPENDENT (SPEED VS TIME VS GEAR SHIFT). The DISTANCE DEPENDENT is the actual replica of the test road whereas TIME DEPENDENT is the compressed version of the actual time taken to conduct the test on road. Examples of TIME DEPENDENT drive cycles are European NEDC cycle, FTP-75. TIME DEPENDENT drive cycles are used specifically for chassis dynamo meter testing because in a short time the results can be availed and repeated tests can be done easily.

Driving Cycle Recognition edit

Based on the type of application drive cycles are made. Drive cycle for passenger cars are different from commercial vehicle.

Driving Cycle Prediction edit

This is a technique for prediction of future driving cycles and patterns for different types of vehicle applications. These cycles are used as an important input in designing and evaluating future power train systems and vehicle concepts. As of today, obsolete drive cycles are used during the design phase and due to this the changes in traffic conditions and infrastructure which has occurred during the last decade are not taken into account. Therefore, the need for new drive cycles representing today or the next few decades is great. This technique can predict future drive cycle by integrating available measurement data, high-fidelity traffic simulators and traffic models for heavy vehicles. Desirably, traffic simulation models are automatically generated and used to collect predicted drive cycles.

References edit

  1. ^ Brundell-Freij, Karin; Ericsson, Eva (May 2005). "Influence of street characteristics, driver category and car performance on urban driving patterns". Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment. 10 (3). Elsevier: 213–229. doi:10.1016/j.trd.2005.01.001.
  2. ^ Ericsson, Eva (September 2000). "Variability in urban driving patterns". Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment. 5 (5). Elsevier: 337–354. doi:10.1016/S1361-9209(00)00003-1.
  3. ^ Ericsson, Eva (September 2001). "Independent driving pattern factors and their influence on fuel-use and exhaust emission factors". Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment. 6 (5). Elsevier: 325–345. doi:10.1016/S1361-9209(01)00003-7.
  4. ^ a b "Dynamometer Drive Schedules". US EPA. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
  5. ^ "A reference book of driving cycles for use in the measurement of road vehicle emissions" (PDF). Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  6. ^ Directive 70/220/EEC
  7. ^ a b "EUR-Lex - 31970L0220 - EN".
  8. ^ "United Nations Treaty Collection".
  9. ^ a b http://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%20740/v740.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ Frequently Asked Questions. Fueleconomy.gov. Retrieved on 21 September 2011.
  11. ^ a b "United Nations Treaty Collection".
  12. ^ "Nuovi test di omologazione veicoli WLTP e RDE". Carpedia (in Italian).
  13. ^ "Test procedure for compression-ignition (C.I.) engines and positive-ignition (P.I.) engines fuelled with natural gas (NG) or liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) with regard to the emission of pollutants".
  14. ^ E/ECE/324/Rev.2/Add.100/Rev.3 or E/ECE/TRANS/505/Rev.2/Add.100/Rev.3 (12 April 2013), "Agreement concerning the adoption of uniform technical prescriptions for wheeled vehicles, equipment and parts which can be fitted and/or be used on wheeled vehicles and the conditions for reciprocal recognition of approvals granted on the basis of these prescriptions", Addendum 100: Regulation No. 101, Uniform provisions concerning the approval of passenger cars powered by an internal combustion engine only, or powered by a hybrid electric power train with regard to the measurement of the emission of carbon dioxide and fuel consumption and/or the measurement of electric energy consumption and electric range, and of categories M1 and N1 vehicles powered by an electric power train only with regard to the measurement of electric energy consumption and electric range.
  15. ^ "08/16/96: Pa Epa Adds Reality Driving Cycle to Veh. Certification Test".
  16. ^ . Web.archive.org (8 October 2007). Retrieved on 21 September 2011.
  17. ^ Find a Car 1985 to 2009. Fueleconomy.gov. Retrieved on 21 September 2011.
  18. ^ Stephen E. Plotkin (December 2007). (PDF). OECD-ITF Joint Transport Research Centre. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  19. ^ Kågeson, Per (March 1998). (PDF). Brussels: European Federation for Transport and Environment. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 May 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  20. ^ "Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP) - Transport - Vehicle Regulations - UNECE Wiki". wiki.unece.org.
  21. ^ "国家标准|Gb/T 38146.1-2019".
  22. ^ "国家标准|Gb/T 38146.2-2019".

External links edit

  • Fleet DNA: Clearinghouse of Commercial Fleet Vehicle Drive Cycle Data (National Renewable Energy Laboratory)
  • US EPA Dynamometer Drive Schedules - Examples of driving cycles and downloadable data sets, including UDDS, FTP75, HWFET, US06, and others.
  • Wheels: road load energy demand calculator - Online tool to calculate vehicle road load over a driving cycle
  • DieselNet - Introduction to various standard driving cycles

driving, cycle, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message A driving cycle is a series of data points representing the speed of a vehicle versus time Driving cycles are produced by different countries and organizations to assess the performance of vehicles in various ways for example fuel consumption electric vehicle autonomy and polluting emissions 1 2 3 Fuel consumption and emission tests are performed on chassis dynamometers Tailpipe emissions are collected and measured to indicate the performance of the vehicle Another use for driving cycles is in vehicle simulations For example they are used in propulsion system simulations to predict performance of internal combustion engines transmissions electric drive systems batteries fuel cell systems and similar components Some driving cycles are derived theoretically as in the European Union whereas others are direct measurements of a representative driving pattern There are two types of driving cycles Transient driving cycles involve many changes representing the constant speed changes typical of on road driving Modal driving cycles involve protracted periods at constant speeds The American FTP 75 4 and the unofficial European Hyzem driving cycles are transient whereas the Japanese 10 15 Mode and JC08 cycles are modal cycles Some highly stylized modal driving cycles such as the European NEDC were designed to fit a particular requirement but bear little relation to real world driving patterns 5 On the contrary the current Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure WLTP strives to mimic real world driving behavior The most common driving cycles are the WLTP NEDC SORDS and the FTP 75 the latter corresponding to urban driving conditions solely Driving cycle design is the core technology for these standard cycles clarification needed Optimization and Markov chains are employed to design a driving cycle citation needed Drive cycle recognition applies to Hybrid Electric Vehicle clarification needed Contents 1 History 1 1 1960s 1 2 1970s 1 3 1980s NEDC 1 4 1990s 1 5 2000s 1 6 2010s 1 7 2020s CATC 2 Data Collection 3 Driving Cycle Design 4 Driving Cycle Recognition 5 Driving Cycle Prediction 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit1960s edit At the end of the 1960s increased use of automobile vehicles led to the first regulations on limiting emissions They first showed up in Germany and then in France which led to the common Directive 70 220 EEC in March 1970 6 On 18 October 1968 was published a 14 October 1968 regulation amended the Strassenverkehrs Zulassungs Ordnung in Germany with provisions on measures to be taken against air pollution by positive ignition engines of motor vehicles to enter into force on 1 October 1970 On 17 May 1969 was published in the Journal officiel a 31 March 1969 regulation on the Composition of exhaust gases emitted from petrol engines of motor vehicles applicable from 1971 or 1972 7 This led to a risk to have different national regulation in different member states of the European Economic Community EEC To avoid this and to protect the common market all member states adopts the same requirements either in addition to or in place of their existing rules in order to allow the EEC type approval procedure defined by Council Directive in 1970 7 1970s edit On 1 August 1970 United Nations Regulation No 15 was registered by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe UN ECE for vehicles equipped with a positive ignition engine or with a compression ignition engine with regard to the emission of gaseous pollutants by the engine a method of measuring the power of positive ignition engines and a method of measuring the fuel consumption of vehicles 8 This UN ECE regulation number 15 had three kind of tests performed with octane 99 Operating cycle used for TYPE I TEST up to 50 km h speed in third gear and up to 1 04 meter per second squared acceleration 9 TYPE II TEST Carbon monoxide emission test at idling speed TYPE III TEST Verifying emissions of crank case gases 9 In 1978 an Energy Tax Act mandated new testing 10 in order to determine the rate of the guzzler tax that applies for the sales of new cars This testing the EPA Federal Test Procedure commonly known as FTP 75 for the city driving cycle is a series of tests defined by the US Environmental Protection Agency EPA to measure tailpipe emissions and fuel economy of passenger cars excluding light trucks and heavy duty vehicles In 1983 in the European Union directive 83 351 EEC amended directive 70 220 EEC against air pollution by gases from positive ignition engines of motor vehicles in conformity with ECE Regulation No 15 04 11 1980s NEDC edit In the 1980s the old NEDC as European homologation lab bench procedure was established to simulate urban driving condition of a passenger car 12 In 1988 in the EEC Directive 88 76 EEC change law to rules more stringent than ECE Regulation 15 04 11 1990s edit In 1992 the NEDC was updated to include also a non urban path characterized by medium to high speeds In 1997 the CO2 emission figure have been added too 13 The structure of the NEDC is characterized by an average speed of 34 km h the accelerations are smooth stops are few and prolonged and top speed is 120 km h 14 In 1996 in the USA the EPA revised the vehicle certification test to introduce new driving conditions including aggressive driving behavior high acceleration rates or air conditioners operation 15 The new test introduces speeds of 80 mph 129 km h instead of 57 mph 92 km h control of emissions during aggressive accelerations effect of air conditioners on nitrogen oxide2000s edit In 2007 the EPA added three new Supplemental Federal Test Procedure SFTP tests 16 that combine the current city and highway cycles to reflect real world fuel economy more accurately Estimates are available for vehicles back to the 1985 model year 4 17 In 2008 the US procedure has been updated and includes four tests city driving the FTP 75 proper highway driving HWFET aggressive driving SFTP US06 and optional air conditioning test SFTP SC03 2010s edit Nowadays the NEDC cycle has become outdated since it is not representative of the modern driving styles since nowadays the distances and road variety a mean car has to face have changed 18 19 From 1 September 2019 all the light duty vehicles that are to be registered in the EU countries but also in Switzerland Norway Iceland and Turkey must comply with the WLTP standards part of the Global regulations 20 In the European Union including UK the WLTP replaces the NEDC 2020s CATC edit On 2019 10 18 the China automotive test cycles CATC are released GB T 38146 21 22 CATC are concluded from a research covering over 17 vehicle models 2 5 million data inputs 700 thousand car owners and 31 provinces in China On 2020 05 01 CATC are into effect Data Collection editData collection from the test road is the most important activity Test road e g city highway etc measured data are the inputs to the Drive Cycle preparation activity The procedure involves instrumentation of the test vehicle to collect information while driving on the test road There are two major types of data to be collected Driver Behavior data and Vehicle versus Road data The Vehicle versus Road data are used to prepare the road drive cycle and the Driver Behavior data to prepare the Driver model For example to calculate a vehicle s fuel consumption either in computer simulation or in chassis dynamo meter which is going to be launched in India it must run on an Indian road with an Indian Driver Indian Drive Cycle with a European driver model does not give a fair comparison of the on road trials Driving Cycle Design editThe Drive cycle basically is the representative of the road Drive cycles are used to reduce the expense of on road tests time of test and fatigue of the test engineer The whole idea is to bring the road to the test lab a chassis dynamo meter or to the computer simulation Two kinds of drive cycle can be made One is DISTANCE DEPENDENT SPEED versus DISTANCE versus ALTITUDE and the other one is TIME DEPENDENT SPEED VS TIME VS GEAR SHIFT The DISTANCE DEPENDENT is the actual replica of the test road whereas TIME DEPENDENT is the compressed version of the actual time taken to conduct the test on road Examples of TIME DEPENDENT drive cycles are European NEDC cycle FTP 75 TIME DEPENDENT drive cycles are used specifically for chassis dynamo meter testing because in a short time the results can be availed and repeated tests can be done easily Driving Cycle Recognition editBased on the type of application drive cycles are made Drive cycle for passenger cars are different from commercial vehicle Driving Cycle Prediction editThis is a technique for prediction of future driving cycles and patterns for different types of vehicle applications These cycles are used as an important input in designing and evaluating future power train systems and vehicle concepts As of today obsolete drive cycles are used during the design phase and due to this the changes in traffic conditions and infrastructure which has occurred during the last decade are not taken into account Therefore the need for new drive cycles representing today or the next few decades is great This technique can predict future drive cycle by integrating available measurement data high fidelity traffic simulators and traffic models for heavy vehicles Desirably traffic simulation models are automatically generated and used to collect predicted drive cycles References edit Brundell Freij Karin Ericsson Eva May 2005 Influence of street characteristics driver category and car performance on urban driving patterns Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment 10 3 Elsevier 213 229 doi 10 1016 j trd 2005 01 001 Ericsson Eva September 2000 Variability in urban driving patterns Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment 5 5 Elsevier 337 354 doi 10 1016 S1361 9209 00 00003 1 Ericsson Eva September 2001 Independent driving pattern factors and their influence on fuel use and exhaust emission factors Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment 6 5 Elsevier 325 345 doi 10 1016 S1361 9209 01 00003 7 a b Dynamometer Drive Schedules US EPA Retrieved 26 April 2014 A reference book of driving cycles for use in the measurement of road vehicle emissions PDF Retrieved 11 August 2014 Directive 70 220 EEC a b EUR Lex 31970L0220 EN United Nations Treaty Collection a b http treaties un org doc Publication UNTS Volume 20740 v740 pdf bare URL PDF Frequently Asked Questions Fueleconomy gov Retrieved on 21 September 2011 a b United Nations Treaty Collection Nuovi test di omologazione veicoli WLTP e RDE Carpedia in Italian Test procedure for compression ignition C I engines and positive ignition P I engines fuelled with natural gas NG or liquefied petroleum gas LPG with regard to the emission of pollutants E ECE 324 Rev 2 Add 100 Rev 3 or E ECE TRANS 505 Rev 2 Add 100 Rev 3 12 April 2013 Agreement concerning the adoption of uniform technical prescriptions for wheeled vehicles equipment and parts which can be fitted and or be used on wheeled vehicles and the conditions for reciprocal recognition of approvals granted on the basis of these prescriptions Addendum 100 Regulation No 101 Uniform provisions concerning the approval of passenger cars powered by an internal combustion engine only or powered by a hybrid electric power train with regard to the measurement of the emission of carbon dioxide and fuel consumption and or the measurement of electric energy consumption and electric range and of categories M1 and N1 vehicles powered by an electric power train only with regard to the measurement of electric energy consumption and electric range 08 16 96 Pa Epa Adds Reality Driving Cycle to Veh Certification Test Earthcars EPA fuel economy ratings what s coming in 2008 Web archive org 8 October 2007 Retrieved on 21 September 2011 Find a Car 1985 to 2009 Fueleconomy gov Retrieved on 21 September 2011 Stephen E Plotkin December 2007 Examining Fuel Economy and Carbon Standards for Light Vehicles Discussion Paper No 2007 1 PDF OECD ITF Joint Transport Research Centre Archived from the original PDF on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 27 August 2012 Kageson Per March 1998 Cycle beating and the EU test for cycle for cars PDF Brussels European Federation for Transport and Environment Archived from the original PDF on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2016 Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure WLTP Transport Vehicle Regulations UNECE Wiki wiki unece org 国家标准 Gb T 38146 1 2019 国家标准 Gb T 38146 2 2019 External links editFleet DNA Clearinghouse of Commercial Fleet Vehicle Drive Cycle Data National Renewable Energy Laboratory US EPA Dynamometer Drive Schedules Examples of driving cycles and downloadable data sets including UDDS FTP75 HWFET US06 and others Wheels road load energy demand calculator Online tool to calculate vehicle road load over a driving cycle DieselNet Introduction to various standard driving cycles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Driving cycle amp oldid 1216519552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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