Abstract

In this paper, the model of optimal energy flow in a passenger vehicle has been founded on the theory of firm microeconomics. Based on this theory, the car owner tries to minimize the total cost of the system (including the cost of time of the traveler), subject to the satisfaction of the required transport services and technological, economical, environmental and institutional constraints. The model has been developed using a technique of mathematical programming. The model depicts the behavior of a nonlinear system and it includes many nonlinear functions in the objective function and in the constraints. Solving the large nonlinear set of constraints and identifying the global optimal energy flow was a major issue in the process of developing the model. Therefore, an integrated approach based on numerical analysis, linear programming and the concept of control volume, as a means of defining open and interrelated systems, has been developed and applied in solving the model. Solution of the model has been based on the boundary conditions that define the surroundings of the vehicle. The output data resulting from solution of the model are: material elements and optimal energy balances in different parts of the vehicle, transient behavior fuel consumption and emission of pollutants in the course of operation of the vehicle.

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