3.8 Review

A Review of Heavy-Duty Vehicle Powertrain Technologies: Diesel Engine Vehicles, Battery Electric Vehicles, and Hydrogen Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles

Journal

CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 474-489

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cleantechnol3020028

Keywords

heavy-duty vehicles; diesel engine trucks; battery electric trucks; fuel cell electric trucks; zero-emission vehicles

Funding

  1. Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Waterloo, Canada Research Chair Tier I-Zero-Emission Vehicles and Hydrogen Energy Systems [950-232215]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2020-04149]

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Greenhouse gas emissions from freight transportation, particularly heavy-duty diesel vehicles, are significant contributors to climate change and pollution. Governments worldwide are transitioning to electric and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles to reduce emissions. While diesel engines remain important in the short term due to existing infrastructure and lower costs, battery-electric and hydrogen fuel cell technologies are slowly developing to overcome barriers and penetrate the market.
Greenhouse gas emissions from the freight transportation sector are a significant contributor to climate change, pollution, and negative health impacts because of the common use of heavy-duty diesel vehicles (HDVs). Governments around the world are working to transition away from diesel HDVs and to electric HDVs, to reduce emissions. Battery electric HDVs and hydrogen fuel cell HDVs are two available alternatives to diesel engines. Each diesel engine HDV, battery-electric HDV, and hydrogen fuel cell HDV powertrain has its own advantages and disadvantages. This work provides a comprehensive review to examine the working mechanism, performance metrics, and recent developments of the aforementioned HDV powertrain technologies. A detailed comparison between the three powertrain technologies, highlighting the advantages and disadvantages of each, is also presented, along with future perspectives of the HDV sector. Overall, diesel engine in HDVs will remain an important technology in the short-term future due to the existing infrastructure and lower costs, despite their high emissions, while battery-electric HDV technology and hydrogen fuel cell HDV technology will be slowly developed to eliminate their barriers, including costs, infrastructure, and performance limitations, to penetrate the HDV market.

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