Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper addresses the limited adaptability and the computational burden of energy management systems (EMSs) for hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) implemented via dynamic programming (DP)-based approaches. First, a deterministic dynamic programming (DDP) framework is presented to solve HEV EMS problems subject to a specific driving cycle. To address this limitation, an improved DDP approach, integrating the actual travelled position of the vehicle into the control law, is proposed. This way, a given DDP-based EMS can be applied to all the driving cycles, yet still measured on the same road. Stochastic dynamic programming (SDP)-based EMSs are also developed and prove to be more adaptive to driving scenarios completely different from the ones used for their computation. Real-world driving cycles are employed in all the presented cases, while a reduced HEV powertrain model is used to alleviate the typical DP computational burden.

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