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Porsche's new supercar the Carrera GT is a study in lightweight material use. The chassis and engine subframe are fashioned from carbon fiber reinforced plastic, and there is extensive use of magnesium, ceramics, aluminum and a new lightweight steel grade – H400.
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If you remove Detroit from the ranking, in the world of distributed automotive
centers, Stuttgart is preeminent. Home to DaimlerChrysler, Porsche and mega-supplier
Bosch, Stuttgart is a place where many automotive suppliers, ranging from software
developers to plastic injection molders, feel they must have a presence in order
to stay on the cutting edge. And unlike many areas where the importance of the
automotive industry has been eclipsed by other high-tech industries, the Stuttgart
region has actually seen the percentage of its total manufacturing output represented
by automotive manufacturing rise from 28.7% in 1980 to 41.1% in 2000. The majority
of that growth has been in small and medium-sized companies; to keep them flowing
into the area the Stuttgart Region Economic Development Corporation has helped
create a network of 17 Competence Centers, each of which focus on
a specific area of technology like telematics or fuel cells. These centers allow
smaller companies to pool resources with local universities to carry out R&D
projects that would otherwise be out of their reach. But many of the more well-established
players have the deep pockets needed to stay at the forefront of technological
development. Heres a look at some of the latest developments to come from
companies based in Stuttgart.
DAimlErChryslEr: Fuel cell forefront. In 1994 the company then known as Daimler-Benz
unveiled its first fuel cell vehicle. It was a full-size van with a massive
fuel cell unit that took up the entire rear cargo area, effectively turning
the van into a heavy two-seater with no storage space. Not exactly a marketable
commodity. Since then, DaimlerChryslers research center at Nabern near
Stuttgart has refined its fuel cell system to the point that it now fits into
an A-Class without any intrusion into the passenger compartment. It can be assembled
into vehicles on the same line as its internal combustion-powered counterparts.
Dr. Andreas Truckenbrodt, director, Fuel Cell and Alternative Powertrain Vehicles,
says that the tremendous advances in reducing the size and increasing the range
of fuel cell vehicles have put commercialization within reach. He outlines DaimlerChryslers four-stage fuel cell strategy:
- Market preparation. This initial research phase has greatly matured fuel
cell hardware and is nearly complete.
- Fit for Daily Use. This phase is kicking off now and will encompass
a program to provide 30 fuel cell buses for regular routes in 10 European cities.
In addition, by the end of 2004 the company plans to have 100 of its A-Class-based
fuel cell vehicles (each with a range of about 150 km) in daily use.
- Ramp-up. This phase will run from 2007 through 2010 and see the gradual increase
of production.
- Commercialization. Truckenbrodt says fuel cell vehicles will be a mass-production
reality by 2010, though they will remain a small part of the overall market
for a long time.
Arriving at this strategy required abandoning some other alternatives. For
example, theres using hydrogen as a fuel for modified internal combustion
engines (an approach often touted by BMW). About that, Truckenbrodt says, We
have spent a lot of money on hydrogen combustion engines and we have given up.
He explains that the lower power density of hydrogen compared to gasoline or
diesel fuel together with the greater inefficiency of an internal combustion
engine (due to the excessive amount of energy that must be dissipated as waste
heat) essentially drives a stake in the heart of this alternative. Truckenbrodt
also reveals that DaimlerChrysler has essentially given up on on-board fuel
reformers that crack hydrogen from fuels like methanol: Reformation is
a non-starter from the efficiency point of view. And the reformer itself adds
too much weight and complexity. Also, you usually need to provide a separate
water supply which opens up problems with freezing. Though he embraces
hydrogen, Truckenbrodt rejects using it in liquid form which has to be stored
hundreds of degrees below zero, You cant stop it from getting warmer
and it will evaporate from the tank within two weeks, he explains. Compressed
hydrogen is what DaimlerChrysler engineers think is the best form, and though
range is a problem, the standard for hydrogen compression in the industry will
soon double from 5,000 psi to 10,000 psi, which Truckenbrodt says will increase
range by 80%.
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WHAT A DIFFERENCE A DECADE MAKES. DaimlerChryslers first fuel cell took
up most of the cargo area of a full-size van. The companys latest fuel
cell vehicle, imaginatively called Fuel-Cell, fits everything neatly
under the floorpan of a diminutive A-Class.
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DaimlerChryslers research teams are currently focusing on ways to improve
the power density of their fuel cells by experimenting with the use of bi-polar
metallic plates that would more efficiently lead the hydrogen over the membranes,
and membrane materials that can function at higher temperatures. With an eye
toward reducing cost and complexity the teams are also determining if the sophisticated
electronic sensors that measure the voltage in each fuel cell are really necessary.
And though every vehicle development program targets weight reduction, it is
particularly important for the A-Class since the fuel cell version is currently
300 kg heavier than a conventional model.
BEhr: global cooling. Behr GmbH and Co. is the number-one supplier of air conditioning
systems for the European passenger car marketa fact that is all the more
impressive when you know that in the last decade automotive air conditioning
installation rates in Europe have soared from about 20% to 80%. But Europeans
new found love for A/C has raised environmental concerns about increases in
global warming gasses. So the European Union is discussing a ban of the refrigerant
R134a that would begin phasing in in 2008. That doesnt give suppliers
much time to come up with alternatives, but Behr already has a working system
that uses simple carbon dioxide (CO2) as its refrigerant. The benefits of using
CO2 are clear: its global warming potential is 1,300 times less than that of
R134a, and if A/C units are charged using the CO2 that is the waste byproduct
of many industrial operations, the impact on the environment is nil. CO2 also
cools more efficiently. Behr estimates that its CO2 system consumes 14 to 25%
less fuel for the same cooling output as current units, reducing both operating
costs and emissions. So, whats the catch? Pressure. CO2 systems must operate
at much higher pressures (120 bar vs. 30 bar for R134a) to be effective, which
means that inexpensive rubber seals must be replaced with costlier metal (though
not necessarily stainless steel) that can stand up to the increased pressure.
Still, the efficiency savings alone should outweigh the increased part costs
once the units are in mass production. We think CO2 will be the future
of automotive air conditioning, says Dr. Thomas Heckenberger, director
of Behrs Group Technology Center.
PorschE: material benefits. The grounds of the Porsche Development Center in
Weissach are a vision of a world in which everyone owns a Porsche but are forbidden
garages. 911s, Boxsters and Cayennes are shoehorned into every nook and cranny
of asphalt along the road, leading to a Porsche-per-square-foot ratio that must
top even Southern California. But the one Porsche product not found in this
cheek-by-jowl arrangement is the yet-to-be-released Carrera GT supercar. Since
the car will go for about $400,000 a copy when it debuts this fall, avoiding
door dings is a high priority.
In addition to being by far the most expensive vehicle in Porsches model
line, the Carrera GT is by far its most technically advanced. It is essentially
a street-legal F-1 machine, so its no coincidence that its development
criteria would be familiar to any F-1 designer: minimal weight, maximal stiffness,
lowest center of gravity, and a midship engine. To help meet the first two criteria
Porsche designed the most carbon fiber-intensive chassis in the world. The passenger
box portion is fashioned from carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) and integrates
the windshield frame and roll bar for maximum rigidity. (The Carrera GT is an
open top car but it has better torsional stiffness than the closed 911.) The
CFRP is made up of an upper and lower layer of carbon fiber that sandwiches
a honeycomb layer of aluminum or a resin-impregnated material called Nomex,
which is widely used in aircraft and spacecraft. The rear subframe which houses
the engine and is bolted onto the passenger box also uses CFRP, but it features
a heat-resistant honeycomb and a special resin in the matrix that can withstand
the heat generated by the engine without deforming. (In a gentle jab at archrival
Ferrari, Porsche engineers point out that the subframe of their competitors
supercar the Enzo is merely constructed of welded aluminum.)
In all, 1,000 different pieces of CFRP are used on the chassis and each one
is arranged by hand to provide maximum strength. For example, where bending
loads are highlike in the door sillsuni-directional weaves are used
to enhance bending strength. After the CFRP pieces are laid up, the chassis
is rolled into an autoclave where it is subjected to 180°C and 6 bar of
pressure for four hours in order to harden the structure. Each chassis takes
five days to produce, so Porsche will need to have 10 identical sets of tooling
on hand to reach the planned production of two Carrera GTs a day. All of this
handwork is not cheap, but according to Michael Holscher, the supercars
general project manager, We use the most expensive way of making carbon
fiber because it is the most efficient.
Porsche didnt stint on using other lightweight materials in the Carrera
GT, either. The wheels (19-in. in the front and 20-in. in the rear) are made
of forged magnesium which offers what the company describes as optimum
durability while being 25% lighter than aluminum. Even interior parts
like the center console panel and the gearshift lever frame are made from magnesium.
In fact, Porsche had to use a special magnesium alloy that is heated to 400°C
before stamping in order to get the garnish right.
When Porsches engineers were forced to use something as quotidian as
steel they managed to make that exotic, as well. The front and rear side members,
suspension push rods and rear-axle wishbone are all made of a newly developed
grade of stainless steel, H400. H400 was chosen because it has high formability
and a lower gauge of the steel can be used to absorb more impact energy in a
crash while reducing overall weight.
Porsche also went to extraordinary lengths to ensure that the Carrera GT would
have the lowest center of gravity of any production car in the world. The first
step in doing that was to make sure that it had the lowest crankshaft height,
which is key to determining center of gravity. The car is powered by a 68°
V-10 engine instead of one of Porsches signature horizontally opposed
designs. The reason, as Holscher explains, is that though the crankshaft height
on a horizontally opposed engine is lower than that of a V, the
exhaust components hang below the bottom of the block, inhibiting the engine
from being mounted as low as possible. On the Carrera GTs V-10 the exhaust
components sit above the bottom of the block, allowing the crankshaft height
to be lowered a few crucial (at least to Porsche) millimeters.
An even bigger factor in achieving the lowest center of gravity is an all-new
compact, lightweight clutch that was developed specifically for the Carrera
GT. Porsche engineers needed something small and light but knew they could not
use the kind of carbon fiber clutch common in race cars since customers would
have to replace them more often than their oil. So they developed a clutch that
uses carbon fiber reinforced ceramic discs mated with titanium backing plates
that achieves maximum power density at a low rotational mass, while giving a
service life ten times that of racing clutches.