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Transportation Technology

MIT Says We're Overlooking a Near-Term Solution To Diesel Trucking Emissions (arstechnica.com) 96

Despite efforts from Tesla, Daimler, Nikola and Siemens to reduce emissions from heavy-duty, diesel-powered trucks, either by producing their own electric- or hydrogen-powered alternatives, "trucking in the U.S. is still driven by diesel-fueled, compression-ignition (CI), internal combustion engines," reports Ars Technica. According to a new paper from MIT researchers, "the best way forward is not to wait for all-electric or hydrogen-powered semis, but to build a plug-in hybrid electric (PHEV) truck with an internal combustion engine/generator that can burn either gasoline or renewable ethanol or methanol." From the report: Such a setup preserves the range and affordability that's expected of diesel long-haul trucks while significantly reducing the emissions associated with diesel. To boot, it's a near-term solution; no waiting for battery weight to fall or hydrogen refueling stations to be installed. [T]here are some distinct problems with all-electric and all-diesel trucks that a hybrid flex-fuel truck could solve. First, freight companies are looking for the cheapest way to transport goods from point A to point B, so expensive electric vehicles don't make short-term economic sense, especially if you're competing with other freight companies using cheaper diesel engines.

Using flex-fuel gasoline-alcohol engines has also been shown to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by 90 percent, the MIT researchers wrote, if the emissions reduction system on the truck uses a three-way catalyst (TWC) instead of the diesel-focused selective catalytic reduction (SCR). (The paper notes that this isn't theoretical. A 90-percent reduction in tailpipe NOx from diesel has already been achieved in light-duty gas vehicles and in the heavy-duty Cummins Westport 9 liter natural gas engine.) A flex-fuel gasoline-alcohol engine could also help freight companies achieve "both the lowest air pollution and lowest greenhouse gas emissions when the internal combustion engine operates," the paper notes. In addition, "the relative use of battery power, gasoline power, and alcohol power can be optimized for meeting varying prices and availability of these energy sources as a long-haul truck travels through various regions."

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MIT Says We're Overlooking a Near-Term Solution To Diesel Trucking Emissions

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  • Front page Dup! (Score:5, Informative)

    by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @08:18PM (#58424564)

    It's been a while since we had a both-on-the-front-page dupe!

    • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @08:56PM (#58424716) Journal

      I feel privileged just to have been able to witness such a remarkable thing. It'll be a great story to tell my grandchildren, if I ever have any.

    • ceoyoyo said

      It's been a while since we had a both-on-the-front-page dupe!

      Kudos. I did notice those dupes eariler, one from msmash, one from BeauHD.

      Another problem with /. that I've just discovered: When I was at "-1:13" comments, I didn't see this comment of yours, ceoyoyo. But when I switched to "1:3" comments, your observation showed up. What's with that? I thought the former setting would show all the stuff the latter would, and then some. Is this a issue with /. or with me?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Msmash is beauhd
        They are all the same person
        What makes you think these editors are even human
        This place bit the dust back when perens was relevant

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Actually, it's the second time this year.

      PS. Actually, it's the second time this year.

    • Could this effort be a record?!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Ethanol may be "renewable" but it certainly is not sustainable. It's a very wasteful ineffcient way to create fuel.

    • Ethanol may be "renewable" but it certainly is not sustainable. It's a very wasteful ineffcient way to create fuel.

      Except it isn't actually renewable. In actual practice it is essentially converting diesel fuel into ethanol, often at a net energy loss.

  • Gasoline? Ethanol? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    They use diesel because it is considerably more efficient. All this would accomplish is to make a truck that is very expensive and uses a less efficient engine, while also requiring it to be plugged in and charged in order to reach its full potential. I find it highly unlikely that would actually happen.

  • by AnotherAnonymousUser ( 972204 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @08:54PM (#58424702)
    MIT REALLY want to make sure we don't overlook this near term solution.
    • truckers often drive a thousand miles a day. when tesla showed off there truck that could only do light loads and 300 miles everyone laughed.
  • No idea about this 'PHEV', but I have to say, I like trucking [youtube.com]!

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @09:04PM (#58424744)

    Shipping companies are only interested in cost and getting the jobs done.

    Environmentalists will only accept zero emissions because "we only have 12 years left" [theguardian.com] (5 months ago).

    There's no constituency for half measures and no tolerance for disagreement.

  • by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @10:11PM (#58424950)

    As a former diesel mechanic, I would greatly prefer not to have large gasoline tanks hanging off the side of semi trucks. Gasoline is much easier to ignite and burns more vigorously than diesel. Fuel tanks are frequently damaged in accidents, by tire failure, or by road debris. A switch to gasoline means that people will die by fire if this change occurs.

    • Not to mention that diesels generally have much greater longevity between overhauls if they're cared for properly. A truck that's in the shop is a truck that's burning money.

      • This is likely to be a solvable problem. The lifespan of gassers is constrained by 'value engineering'. If fleet buyers demand more longevity, they'll get it.

        Simple stuff like bigger oil filters and better bearings in the accessories (Aternator/starter/water pump) can cut the repairs by a third easily.

        • doesn't solve the problem of a gasoline engine needing a very wide RPM range and the wear and tear that puts on engine. short engine life is not an option for trucks

          besides, the energy density of gasoline and alcohol is pathetic compared to diesel

          • If the gasoline engine is supplying electricity to a hybrid, it doesn't need a very wide RPM range. It can run at optimum RPM at all times except briefly when starting up and shutting down.

            • You waste energy doing that conversion, and of course the gasoline has less energy per gallon than diesel... why would a long distance truck operation want it? Diesel can now burn cleaner than gasoline, until we get to economical long distance electric trucks not seeing the need for gasoline and certainly not hybrid... again for long distance runs. Local operation of trucks, and light and medium trucks for city/county use is a totally different story, what you're saying might be great there.

          • Gearing solves the RPM range issue...
            • not for gasoline engine it doesn't, power curve REALLY not flat so just trying to fight that. and of course the latest fad CVT for gasoline engines have a short life too (yes fine for consumer cars that will be disposed of in a few years), but that's not for trucking.

              in short, taping a bill and webbed feet onto a pig doesn't make it a duck

              • It's called a CVT, or a lot of gears. It's why a scooter with a 10 HP engine can really accelerate quite well - the engine runs at its peak power output, and the transmission (geared or CVT) handles the rest.
        • "This is likely to be a solvable problem." -- The last 40 years of truck history shows how wrong that comment is. It's always fun to read couch potato comments.

          • I'll play. In the last 40 years gas engines have gone from needing the lifters adjusted every thousand miles and the engine completely worn out at 40K to only needing oil changes in the first 100,000 miles.

            When was the last time you saw an actual engine failure not related to oil starvation in less than 100k? I've seen hundreds of Crown Vics with 300k+ on the original engine in fleet service. Why? Because fleet service customers force the OEM to build better kit.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @11:45PM (#58425154) Homepage

        So you don't want the truck in the shop you want the battery pack in there. It really looks to be the end of long haul. Instead like a relay race a series of short hauls. Drivers going from depot to depot, how quick that swap is, will drive profitability for larger companies. More drivers going for four hours to the next depot and then driving back, the driver owned rig a thing of the past.

        The new profit centre for transport companies generating electricity to fuel their vehicles. Depots can be quite simple, just enough space to drop the trailer, so another truck with a fresh battery pack, takes it over. The truck that dropped it off, swaps battery packs, whilst the driver takes a break and then hauls a trailer back to his home destination, with depots along the entire route. Only suits major transport companies that own the vehicles and they will need to carefully manage vehicles and routes, to ensure trucks always available at those relay depots.

        A little bit complex but now, the cargo keeps moving and never stops. Who gives a crap about an idle truck, the amount of money it burns is a fraction of the cost of idle cargo. This system keeps the cargo on the move, keeps drivers close to their home base working 2 four hour shifts, with those home bases distributed along major routers and the trucks can keep moving 24/7 depending upon how well they have been routed, constantly swapping drivers and have empty battery packs forked off and full ones forked on.

        No space for owner operator in this market at all. The haulage companies now stepping into the renewable energy market to refuel, TAX FREE, when they generate energy to refuel their vehicles, it's no one's business but theirs. Aligned depots with renewable energy generation options smart. So here's one most people wont think of, close to a major pig farm, process that waste to generate methane to run a power station to feed the trucks battery packs, waiting for the next truck to pull in and swap.

        • More drivers going for four hours to the next depot and then driving back, the driver owned rig a thing of the past.

          We knew decades ago the DoT logbook system was a collusion between government and corporations to put the small operators out of business. Or, at least my trucker friends were always on about it.

          • Or, at least my trucker friends were always on about it.

            Yeah, except his point is that the economics will kill independent operators, not the government.

            I agree with the top-level post: While the MIT proposal makes sense environmentally, it is fundamentally unsafe to retrofit existing trucks and run with giant gas tanks hanging off the sides.

            Also agree with rtb61: All-electric vehicles will fundamentally change the industry.

            Once electric is more economical than diesel, things are going to change. And this will happen regardless of government intervention---the g

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          I don't think it will ever happen. Here is why there is not need for the people to drive between depots. That is all uncomplicated highway miles and can easily be automated. The technology needed to do that is already basically in existence today. Unlike in passenger space the cost of lidar unit etc is incidental looking at the overall cap ex of a big rig.

          Nobody is going to implement all those other infrastructure changes for long haul and not also move to a self driving model at the same time. It will

        • oh yes people swamping hi voltage packs totally no danger there.
      • That's not because of some magical Diesel properties, but because of the far higher pressures the Diesel engines have to be built much sturdier (and are, hence, heavier).
        TFA is talking about a multi fuel engine, that would be a Diesel cycle engine anyway, or maybe a HCCI.

        • For sure. Stronger blocks/heads/etc. certainly factor into things, and there's also the fact that diesels tend to develop maximum torque at a substantially lower RPM than gas engines. It wears an engine less to run it at 1800 RPM all the time instead of 4000.

          • On the other hand compare aircraft piston motors and jet engines. The latter are far more reliable even though their rotational speed is much higher.

    • A mechanic should also note short engine life of gasoline engine compared to diesel, especially under long haul conditions.

      13% more energy per volume of diesel compared to gasoline is significant too, and as for alcohol...pfft that stuff is a joke next to diesel, almost half the energy

  • Just aksing, you know...

  • Why do they never consider using up phosphorous and nitrogen eutrification of waterways with in these scenarios? Why would we use up precious resources (clean water and phosphorous) to drive vehicles, when they should be dedicated to food?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Being in trucking for many decades I have noticed two things. Trucking will reject new technologies that do not save them real money. All electric trucks fail because of the way irregular route trucks run. Many that run 24 hours with team drivers which leave little time to charge batteries. Then you have slip seat companies that save money by having more then one driver use a truck. Alternative fuels are also a problem because they simply are not always available where trucks go. Then there is the obvious o

  • Why? Because you don't want to deal with the equivalent of a few bathtubs of spilled gasoline.

    Spilled diesel fuel is a mess. Spilled gasoline is dangerous.

  • by indytx ( 825419 ) on Friday April 12, 2019 @06:52AM (#58425924)

    I've always wondered why no one has ever successfully tested a hybrid turbine-electric system for large trucks. It would seem as if the ability to burn almost anything would future-proof the system, and since the turbine would charge the batteries, you could run it at a constant speed.

    • by dj245 ( 732906 )

      I've always wondered why no one has ever successfully tested a hybrid turbine-electric system for large trucks. It would seem as if the ability to burn almost anything would future-proof the system, and since the turbine would charge the batteries, you could run it at a constant speed.

      I am a turbine engineer. Small gas turbines are very inefficient. 1/2 the efficiency, or less, than a medium or large one.

      And the noise. Small turbines are screamers and it is difficult to insulate the sound because the intake and exhaust can only have so much muffling on them. Pedestrians would be above OSHA short term limits for noise exposure. Nobody near a busy road would stand for it.

  • Do msmash and beauhd not communicate?

  • I have a friend move to Dallas back in 1993 or 1994 to build diesel electric school buses. I lost track of him so I don't know how it turned out but I don't see him on the Fortune 500 so I assume it didn't work out.
  • Gee, where would that idea ever have come from?

    By the bye, next time the crossbuck comes down, don't try to drive around it to beat the train pulled by diesel-electric locomotives....

    (Or maybe we could go back to shipping most stuff long distance on *trains*, which get, lessee, how's their ad go? 1 ton 453mi on a gallon?)

  • NH3 is oft overlooked as a replacement for current fuels. It offers advantages like no carbon, its common and cheap, it can be used as a transition fuel by burning it now and using it as a cheap and fairly safe way to store hydrogen for fuel cells.
  • What is with all the pie-in-the-sky, replace-everything-at-once plans. A large trucking company will order hundreds of trucks at a time, and spec the exact same engine for the last batch of hundreds they bought. The last thing they want to do is have to stock parts for 50 different models in their service centers.

    You wanna get electrics into trucking. Start by selling an axle with an integrated motor and small battery pack. Call it an "overdrive" axle to give it a catchy name. All it would do is help w

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