GE develops electric bus with dual-battery system

03 Dec 2010

GE today said that the hybrid systems research team at its central technology development arm, GE Global Research, had achieved a significant breakthrough that could help accelerate the electrification of bus fleets, delivery trucks and other larger, heavy-duty vehicle fleets.

The GE team successfully demonstrated a dual-battery system on a zero tailpipe emissions hybrid transit bus that pairs a high-energy density sodium battery with a high-power lithium battery.

While significant advances in battery technology have been made, further reductions in the size and cost of batteries will be needed to enable the widespread adoption of electric vehicles.

GE researchers believe a dual system with high power and energy storage capacity could achieve the optimal electric driving range and acceleration requirements at a more practical scale and cost for larger vehicles.

The research is being carried out as part of a $13-million research project GE is engaged in with the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) and Northeast Advanced Vehicle Consortium, funded under the National Fuel Cell Bus Program.

''Public transit and delivery service providers recognise the importance and benefits of transitioning to an electric fleet, but are looking for cost-effective solutions to make that possible,'' said Lembit Salasoo, senior electrical engineer and principal investigator on the hybrid bus project at GE Global Research.