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Dive into the research topics where Aaron Brooker is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron Brooker.


Journal of Power Sources | 2002

ADVISOR: a systems analysis tool for advanced vehicle modeling

Tony Markel; Aaron Brooker; T. Hendricks; V.H. Johnson; K. Kelly; B. Kramer; M. O’Keefe; S. Sprik; Keith Wipke

This paper provides an overview of Advanced Vehicle Simulator (ADVISOR)—the US Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) ADVISOR written in the MATLAB/Simulink environment and developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. ADVISOR provides the vehicle engineering community with an easy-to-use, flexible, yet robust and supported analysis package for advanced vehicle modeling. It is primarily used to quantify the fuel economy, the performance, and the emissions of vehicles that use alternative technologies including fuel cells, batteries, electric motors, and internal combustion engines in hybrid (i.e. multiple power sources) configurations. It excels at quantifying the relative change that can be expected due to the implementation of technology compared to a baseline scenario. ADVISOR’s capabilities and limitations are presented and the power source models that are included in ADVISOR are discussed. Finally, several applications of the tool are presented to highlight ADVISOR’s functionality. The content of this paper is based on a presentation made at the ‘Development of Advanced Battery Engineering Models’ workshop held in Crystal City, Virginia in August 2001. # 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.


SAE 2010 World Congress & Exhibition | 2010

Technology Improvement Pathways to Cost-effective Vehicle Electrification

Aaron Brooker; Matthew Thornton; John P. Rugh

Electrifying transportation can reduce or eliminate dependence on foreign fuels, emission of green house gases, and emission of pollutants. One challenge is finding a pathway for vehicles that gains wide market acceptance to achieve a meaningful benefit. This paper evaluates several approaches aimed at making plug-in electric vehicles (EV) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) cost-effective including opportunity charging, replacing the battery over the vehicle life, improving battery life, reducing battery cost, and providing electric power directly to the vehicle during a portion of its travel. Many combinations of PHEV electric range and battery power are included. For each case, the model accounts for battery cycle life and the national distribution of driving distances to size the battery optimally. Using the current estimates of battery life and cost, only the dynamically plugged-in pathway was cost-effective to the consumer. Significant improvements in battery life and battery cost also made PHEVs more cost-effective than todays hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) and conventional internal combustion engine vehicles (CVs).


SAE 2015 World Congress & Exhibition | 2015

FASTSim: A Model to Estimate Vehicle Efficiency, Cost and Performance

Aaron Brooker; Jeffrey Gonder; Lijuan Wang; Eric Wood; Sean Lopp; Laurie Ramroth

The Future Automotive Systems Technology Simulator (FASTSim) is a high-level advanced vehicle powertrain systems analysis tool supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Vehicle Technologies Office. FASTSim provides a quick and simple approach to compare powertrains and estimate the impact of technology improvements on light- and heavy-duty vehicle efficiency, performance, cost, and battery batches of real-world drive cycles. FASTSim’s calculation framework and balance among detail, accuracy, and speed enable it to simulate thousands of driven miles in minutes. The key components and vehicle outputs have been validated by comparing the model outputs to test data for many different vehicles to provide confidence in the results. A graphical user interface makes FASTSim easy and efficient to use. FASTSim is freely available for download from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s website (see www.nrel.gov/fastsim).


SAE transactions | 2003

Full Vehicle Simulation for Series Hybrid Vehicles

John A. MacBain; Joseph J. Conover; Aaron Brooker

Delphi and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) collaborated to develop a simulation code to model the mechanical and electrical architectures of a series hybrid vehicle simultaneously. This co-simulation code is part of the larger ADVISOR® product created by NREL and diverse partners. Simulation of the macro power flow in a series hybrid vehicle requires both the mechanical drivetrain and the entire electrical architecture. It is desirable to solve the electrical network equations in an environment designed to comprehend such a network and solve the equations in terms of current and voltage. The electrical architecture for the series hybrid vehicle has been modeled in Saber to achieve these goals. This electrical architecture includes not only the high-voltage battery, generator, and traction motor, but also the normal low-voltage bus (14V) with loads common to all vehicles. The co-simulation version of the series hybrid model retains some of ADVISORs standard series vehicle model elements such as the mechanical drivetrain, the fuel converter, and the series hybrid control strategy. The electrical architecture is simulated in Saber, which is controlled via ADVISORs menu structure. ADVISOR communicates with Saber through a co-simulation arrangement, allowing a system-level solution to progress. The open code permits the end user to implement vehicle-specific series hybrid control strategies. This paper covers technical materials including: A brief overview of the co-simulation concept The electrical component and system models in Saber necessary for the series hybrid vehicle architecture The series hybrid control strategy used for co-simulation and its integration into ADVISOR Discussion of sample results from the co-simulation of ADVISORs baseline series hybrid vehicle Demonstration of the ability to co-simulate the propulsion and electrical systems for ADVISORs default series hybrid vehicle.


Archive | 2006

Plug-In Hybrid Vehicle Analysis (Milestone Report)

Tony Markel; Aaron Brooker; J. Gonder; M. O'Keefe; A. Simpson; M. Thornton

NRELs plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (PHEV) analysis activities made great strides in FY06 to objectively assess PHEV technology, support the larger U.S. Department of Energy PHEV assessment effort, and share technical knowledge with the vehicle research community and vehicle manufacturers. This report provides research papers and presentations developed in FY06 to support these efforts. The report focuses on the areas of fuel economy reporting methods, cost and consumption benefit analysis, real-world performance expectations, and energy management strategies.


vehicle power and propulsion conference | 2015

A Cost Effectiveness Analysis of Quasi-Static Wireless Power Transfer for Plug-In Hybrid Electric Transit Buses

Lijuan Wang; Jeff Gonder; Evan Burton; Aaron Brooker; Andrew Meintz; Arnaud Konan

This study evaluates the costs and benefits associated with the use of a stationary-wireless- power-transfer-enabled plug-in hybrid electric bus and determines the cost effectiveness relative to a conventional bus and a hybrid electric bus. A sensitivity sweep was performed over many different battery sizes, charging power levels, and number/location of bus stop charging stations. The net present cost was calculated for each vehicle design and provided the basis for design evaluation. In all cases, given the assumed economic conditions, the conventional bus achieved the lowest net present cost while the optimal plug-in hybrid electric bus scenario beat out the hybrid electric comparison scenario. The study also performed parameter sensitivity analysis under favorable and high unfavorable market penetration assumptions. The analysis identifies fuel saving opportunities with plug-in hybrid electric bus scenarios at cumulative net present costs not too dissimilar from those for conventional buses.


Journal of Power Sources | 2012

Sensitivity of Battery Electric Vehicle Economics to Drive Patterns, Vehicle Range, and Charge Strategies

Jeremy Neubauer; Aaron Brooker; Eric Wood


Journal of Power Sources | 2013

Sensitivity of plug-in hybrid electric vehicle economics to drive patterns, electric range, energy management, and charge strategies

Jeremy Neubauer; Aaron Brooker; Eric Wood


Presented at the SAE 2013 World Congress & Exhibition, 16-18 April 2013, Detroit, Michigan | 2013

Lightweighting Impacts on Fuel Economy, Cost, and Component Losses

Aaron Brooker; Jacob Ward; Lijuan Wang


Archive | 2010

Analysis of Off-Board Powered Thermal Preconditioning in Electric Drive Vehicles

Robb A. Barnitt; Aaron Brooker; Laurie Ramroth; John P. Rugh; Kandler A. Smith

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Jeffrey Gonder

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Laurie Ramroth

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Eric Wood

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Lijuan Wang

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Jeff Gonder

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Andrew Meintz

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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John P. Rugh

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Tony Markel

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Arnaud Konan

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Eleftheria Kontou

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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