Automotive

Lotus announces purpose-built Range Extender Engine

The Lotus Range Extender Engine will maintain hybrid vehicle efficiency and range while reducing the weight and expense of batteries
The Lotus Range Extender Engine will maintain hybrid vehicle efficiency and range while reducing the weight and expense of batteries

Designed specifically for the new breed of highly efficient series hybrid vehicles, Lotus Engineering’s Range Extender engine was shown for the first time at the 63rd Frankfurt International Motor Show. In a series hybrid vehicle, the Range Extender engine is attached to an electricity generator and provides a highly efficient source of energy to power the electric motor directly or charge the vehicle's battery. The three-cylinder 1.2 liter Range Extender engine is optimized between two power generation points, giving 15 kW of electrical power at 1,500 rpm and 35 kW at 3,500 rpm via the integrated electrical generator. The battery can also power the electric motor which enables the design of a drivetrain with low emissions, optimized performance and acceptable range.

The Lotus Range Extender engine features an innovative architecture comprising an aluminum monoblock construction, integrating the cylinder block, cylinder head and exhaust manifold in one casting. This results in reduced engine mass, assembly costs, package size and improved emissions and engine durability.

Its low mass of 56 kg makes it ideal for the series hybrid drivetrain configurations for which it is designed. The engine uses an optimized two-valve port-fuel injection combustion system to reduce cost and mass and, in line with Lotus Engineering’s extensive research into renewable fuels, can be operated on alcohol-based fuels or gasoline.

For successful market uptake of series hybrid vehicles with acceptable driving range, vehicle manufacturers must overcome the challenges of high vehicle cost. The Lotus Range Extender engine not only offers the advantage of a cost effective design, but also its high efficiency and low mass will enable the downsizing of expensive batteries whilst maintaining vehicle efficiency and range. The engine has been designed using production methodologies and the parts procured from low volume potential production suppliers, offering a fast route to market for original equipment manufacturers wanting to source a dedicated range extender for series hybrid vehicles.

Paul Newsome, Managing Director of Lotus Engineering said: “As the world changes, Lotus Engineering continues to change with it, continuously developing solutions for more sustainable transportation. The Lotus Range Extender engine is another example of Lotus Engineering developing new technologies for efficient performance, this time in the area of series hybrid vehicles. The engine concept we have created with its optimized combustion and compact, low mass, low cost construction is a clear demonstration of the expertise and progressive approach Lotus takes for its own research and for its clients.”

The Lotus Range Extender engine has been developed as part of the ‘Limo-Green’ project funded by the UK’s Technology Strategy Board, a collaboration between Lotus Engineering, Jaguar Cars Ltd, MIRA Ltd and Caparo Vehicle Technologies, demonstrating a large, lightweight, prestigious executive saloon with less than 120 g/km CO2 emissions.

Simon Wood, Technical Director of Lotus Engineering said: “Most series hybrid vehicles that are currently being developed will use adaptations of existing, conventional engines which are therefore compromised in the efficiency that they can achieve, designed as they are for a wide range of operating conditions. Designing the Lotus Range Extender purely for use in series hybrids has allowed us instead to develop an optimized engine that has high thermal efficiency, low fuel consumption, multi-fuel capability and a 35 kW peak output from a 1.2 liter, low cost architecture over the precise operating range required by a series hybrid drivetrain.”

Key features of the Range Extender engine in detail:

Monoblock


The Range Extender features a novel engine architecture incorporating a monoblock construction that blends the cylinder head and block together, eliminating the need for a cylinder head gasket, improving durability and reducing weight. Approximately 17 parts are eliminated using this approach and the water jacket is better optimized.

Integrated Exhaust Manifold


Lotus Engineering designed and developed a new advanced cylinder head design featuring an integrated exhaust manifold. The production-ready technology can significantly reduce manufacturing costs, emissions and weight.

An integrated exhaust manifold has potential to:

Reduce parts count

18 fewer components resulting in lower inventory, production, logistics and aftermarket costs

Lower weight

Total system mass reduction resulting from elimination of separate exhaust manifold

Improve engine durability

The generator
 attached to the engine via the crankshaft sustains vehicle operation beyond the range provided by the batteries.

Additional Benefits


The Lotus Range Extender engine generates a reduction in emissions through faster light-off of the close-coupled catalytic converter, with a reduction in heat loss between the exhaust port and catalyst inlet. Engine operating range is optimized to deliver more efficient running, which also aids underhood thermal management.

Utilization of the monoblock construction results in an assembly cost reduction, while there is also a reduced catalyst loading requirement because less heat is lost on engine start-up between the exhaust port and catalyst inlet.

Increased vehicle integration flexibility is achieved because of the reduction in mass and the reduced package size leads to reduced space requirements. Particular emphasis has also been placed on the coupling of the generator and NVH signature.

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3 comments
windykites
If the engine was just used as an electricity generator, then a gear box would not be required. The fundamental question is, what is more efficient: an engine used as an electricity generator, or to drive wheels through a gearbox?
I remember reading an article in the mid-fifties, in Popular Mechanics, which showed a car with an electricity generator driven from the engine, so the idea is very old. I suppose in those days petrol was cheaper, especially in the USA, so no-one was bothered with fuel economy
Burnerjack
I have been told about 30% energy is lost with energy conversion. This is why many designs utilize a parallel drive set up where the primary mover drives the wheels with augmentation via a parasitic electric drive. What are the benefits to a hybrid drive you ask? Well, the main inefficiency that hybrids address is the size of the powerplant must be capable of handling the maximum design load. Unfortunately, this load is not often utilized. The hybrid scenario allows for a smaller primary mover because batteries or other energy storage devices can make up the maximum load capability. So while mechanical to electrical back to mechanical energy conversion is insanely inefficient on paper, because of the decoupling of primary mover to load, it more than makes up for it. What I don\'t get is electric or worse electromechanical drives for aviation. This application has a very steady state output/load situation. no hills, no stop and go (I hope).
John Routledge
@Windykites1: At certian specific RPM ranges the gearbox (varying slightly with driving conditions) is more efficient, but the problem is cars spend 99.9999% of their times at other speeds. Most of the time an electric transmission would be lighter, allow the engine to operate at peak efficiency 100% of the time, and transmit that power better to the swheels - though perhaps more expensive to build. Especially if you start including hub motors.
@Burnerjack: Generators and motors tend to operate in the 90% to 95% efficiency range, giving an overall effiency range of 81% to 90.25%. So I really don't know where you're getting that 30% losses nonsense from.