Experimental Exploration of Battery-Engine Hybrid-Electric Power Sharing
F-0081-2025-0361
5/20/2025
- Content
-
ABSTRACT
A regulated hybrid-electric power sharing architecture was developed and tested for VTOL applications. In this architecture, there are two power supply branches and one load. The first branch draws power from an engine-generator, and it has additional components of an AC-DC rectifier, a DC-DC buck converter, and a power diode. The second branch draws power from a battery, and it has additional components of a solid-state relay, a DC-DC boost converter, and a power diode. Any specified ratio of battery-to-engine power can be achieved with this architecture. Testing on the full range of power share ratios was conducted at a low load power of 300W. The key conclusions are that: (1) regulated power sharing is feasible between an AC supply and a DC battery, including the extremes of all engine and no battery to all battery and no engine, (2) a specified power share ratio can be achieved both in steady-state and transient conditions, and (3) there is a delay in achieving a specified power share ratio, caused not by the power plant, but rather by the change in RPM of the rotor.
- Citation
- Schmidt, J., Xu, H., and Datta, A., "Experimental Exploration of Battery-Engine Hybrid-Electric Power Sharing," Vertical Flight Society 81st Annual Forum and Technology Display, Virginia Beach, Virginia, May 20, 2025, https://doi.org/10.4050/F-0081-2025-0361.