Abstract

The trend to replace traditional fossil fuel vehicles is becoming increasingly apparent. The replacement concerns the use of pure biofuels or in blends with traditional fuels, the use of hydrogen as an alternative fuel and, above all, the introduction of electric propulsion. The introduction of new types of vehicle propulsion affects the demand for specific fuels, the needs for new infrastructure, or the nature of the emissions to the environment generated by fuel production and vehicle operation. The article presents a mathematical model using the difference of two logistic functions, the first of which describes the development of the production of a specific type of vehicle, and the second, the withdrawal of this type of vehicle from traffic after its use. The model makes it possible to forecast both the number of vehicles of each generation as a function of time, as well as changes in energy demand from various sources and changes in exhaust emissions. The results of the numerical simulation show replacing classic vehicles with alternative vehicles increases the total energy demand if the generation of the next generation occurs earlier than the decay of the previous generation of vehicles and may decrease in the case of overlapping or delays in the creation of new vehicles compared to the course of the decay function of the previous generation. For electric vehicles, carbon dioxide emissions are largely dependent on the emissions from electricity generation. The proposed model can be used to forecast technology development variants, as well as analyze the current situation based on the approximation of real data from Vehicle Registration Offices.

Highlights

  • Vehicles powered by an internal combustion engine are the main means of transport for both passenger and freight

  • Reasonable to assume that the number of products consumed at earlier momentinintime time.isThis justifies the the number products used will a given moment proportional toassumption the numberthat produced at aofcorrespondingly be represented by the logistic function, but shifted to a correspondingly later moment

  • The difference between the number of products produced to date and the will be represented by the logistic function, but shifted to a correspondingly later number of products used up to that moment determines the number of products moment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

It should be taken into account that the process of combustion may be much faster than the process of biomass growth, what causes lack of equilibrium between emission and absorption [9,43]. It seems, that idea of long time use of biofuels has only temporary, transitional meaning. The amount of energy needed to build the infrastructure corresponding to the needs of electric or hydrogen powered cars appears to be the important factor determining further development and spreading of these types of vehicles

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.