| Titre : | Automotive Electricity : électric drives | | Type de document : | texte imprimé | | Auteurs : | Joseph Baretta, Auteur | | Editeur : | London, Hoboken : ISTE/John Wiley and Sons | | Année de publication : | 2010 | | Titres uniformes : |
Le génie électrique automobile: la traction électrique
| | Importance : | 320 p. | | Présentation : | couv. ill. en coul., ill. | | Format : | 23,3 cm. | | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-84821-095-0 | | Langues : | Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Français (fre) | | Index. décimale : | 10-03 Machines éléctriques | | Résumé : | Since the beginning of the century, electrical goods have invaded our everyday lives. Now, electric power is coming to be seen as a solution to the pollution caused by cars. While this transition has remained very slow during the last ten years, it has been accelerating as the statutory constraints and needs of the market have changed. Even if the electric car itself fails to dominate the market, electric traction is taking an important place in our drive to move away from gas-powered vehicles. Another solution, hybrid vehicles, combine two sources of energy (electric and chemical), reducing the global consumption of fossil fuels. Fuel cell vehicles are also one of the most promising technologies for the future, with the capacity to use any fuel - hydrogen being the ideal fuel ecologically, but constrained by infrastructure and storage issues. This book explores all these different solutions for moving our vehicles from fossil fuel consumption to new, more environmentally-friendly power sources. | | Note de contenu : | Table of contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Basic Definitions
2.1.1. Basics of automotive energy.
2.1.2. Basics of automotive dynamics
2.2. The different electric drive-train systems
2.2.3. Thermal-electric hybrid systems
2.2.4. Complex hybrids
Chapter 3. Electric-Powered Vehicles
3.2. Battery-powered electric vehicles
3.3. Recharging systems for electric vehicles
3.4. Thermal/electric hybrid vehicles
3.5. Fuel-cell vehicles
Chapter 4. The Components of Electric-Powered Vehicles
4.1. Electric motors
4.2. Electronic converters
4.3. Batteries and static storage systems
4.4. The fuel cell and on-board fuel storage
Chapter 5. Prospects and Evolutions of Electric-Powered Vehicles: What Technologies by 2015?
5.1. Mobility
5.2. New technologies
5.3. New cars
Appendices
-Index |
Automotive Electricity : électric drives [texte imprimé] / Joseph Baretta, Auteur . - London, Hoboken : ISTE/John Wiley and Sons, 2010 . - 320 p. : couv. ill. en coul., ill. ; 23,3 cm. ISBN : 978-1-84821-095-0 Oeuvre : Le génie électrique automobile: la traction électriqueLangues : Anglais ( eng) Langues originales : Français ( fre) | Index. décimale : | 10-03 Machines éléctriques | | Résumé : | Since the beginning of the century, electrical goods have invaded our everyday lives. Now, electric power is coming to be seen as a solution to the pollution caused by cars. While this transition has remained very slow during the last ten years, it has been accelerating as the statutory constraints and needs of the market have changed. Even if the electric car itself fails to dominate the market, electric traction is taking an important place in our drive to move away from gas-powered vehicles. Another solution, hybrid vehicles, combine two sources of energy (electric and chemical), reducing the global consumption of fossil fuels. Fuel cell vehicles are also one of the most promising technologies for the future, with the capacity to use any fuel - hydrogen being the ideal fuel ecologically, but constrained by infrastructure and storage issues. This book explores all these different solutions for moving our vehicles from fossil fuel consumption to new, more environmentally-friendly power sources. | | Note de contenu : | Table of contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Basic Definitions
2.1.1. Basics of automotive energy.
2.1.2. Basics of automotive dynamics
2.2. The different electric drive-train systems
2.2.3. Thermal-electric hybrid systems
2.2.4. Complex hybrids
Chapter 3. Electric-Powered Vehicles
3.2. Battery-powered electric vehicles
3.3. Recharging systems for electric vehicles
3.4. Thermal/electric hybrid vehicles
3.5. Fuel-cell vehicles
Chapter 4. The Components of Electric-Powered Vehicles
4.1. Electric motors
4.2. Electronic converters
4.3. Batteries and static storage systems
4.4. The fuel cell and on-board fuel storage
Chapter 5. Prospects and Evolutions of Electric-Powered Vehicles: What Technologies by 2015?
5.1. Mobility
5.2. New technologies
5.3. New cars
Appendices
-Index |
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