Skip to content

A continuing role for hybrids calls for high-power battery solutions

Mild hybrids require high power batteries that can soak up as much regenerative braking energy as possible. The challenge for developers is keeping them cool, and small. By Xavier Boucherat

From an engineering perspective, hybrid vehicles are not an ideal solution. Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) are particularly troublesome, requiring two parallel drivetrain technologies when ideally just one should suffice. But even mild hybrids (MHEV), in which batteries help improve fuel economy but don’t have a direct drivetrain role, present automakers with challenges. Packaging and weight requirements are tight enough as is, so why does confidence in the market persist? And what’s driving automakers to pursue these sophisticated solutions?

It’s time to log in (or subscribe).

Not a member? Subscribe now and let us help you understand the future of mobility.

Pro
£495/year
or £49.50/month
1 user
News
yes
Magazine
yes
Articles
yes
Special Reports
yes
Research
no
OEM Tracker
no
OEM Model Plans
no
OEM Production Data
no
OEM Sales Data
no
Pro+
£1,950/year
or £195/month
1 user
News
yes
Magazine
yes
Articles
yes
Special Reports
yes
Research
yes
OEM Tracker
yes
OEM Model Plans
yes
OEM Production Data
yes
OEM Sales Data
yes
Pro+ Team
£3,950/year
or £395/month
Up to 5 users
News
yes
Magazine
yes
Articles
yes
Special Reports
yes
Research
yes
OEM Tracker
yes
OEM Model Plans
yes
OEM Production Data
yes
OEM Sales Data
yes
Pro+ Enterprise
Unlimited
News
yes
Magazine
yes
Articles
yes
Special Reports
yes
Research
yes
OEM Tracker
yes
OEM Model Plans
yes
OEM Production Data
yes
OEM Sales Data
yes

Welcome back , to continue browsing the site, please click here