An Analytic Foundation for the Toyota Prius THS-II Powertrain with a Comparison to a Strong Parallel Hybrid-Electric Powertrain
Date Published: 2006-04-03
Paper Number:2006-01-0666
DOI: 10.4271/2006-01-0666
Citation:
Meisel, J., "An Analytic Foundation for the Toyota Prius THS-II Powertrain with a Comparison to a Strong Parallel Hybrid-Electric Powertrain," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-0666, 2006, doi:10.4271/2006-01-0666.
Hybrid-electric powertrains for passenger vehicles and light trucks are generally being designed with two different configurations described as follows: The Toyota Hybrid System, THS-II, implemented in the 2004 Prius, the Lexus 400-H, and the Ford Hybrid Escape, is a
power-split
approach involving two electric machines and an internal combustion engine (ICE) mechanically coupled by a three-shaft planetary gear train. The second leading approach is a
parallel
hybrid-electric powertrain that generally includes a single electric machine and an ICE with a mating multi-ratio transmission. These parallel configurations are further divided as
weak parallel
and
strong parallel
. Honda uses a weak parallel powertrain in their Insight and Hybrid Civic. At Georgia Tech a strong (full), split-parallel hybrid powertrain has been implemented in a Ford Explorer. The vehicle is referred to as the Model GT. After presenting an analytic description of the THS-II operation, this paper then compares and contrasts the THS-II and Model GT powertrains outlining the advantages and disadvantages of each design.
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