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TRIMIS

Compact hydro generator for electric vehicles charging stations (to serve as an energy lifebuoy)

PROJECTS
Funding
European
European Union
Duration
-
Status
Complete with results
Geo-spatial type
Other
Total project cost
€71 429
EU Contribution
€50 000
Project Acronym
lif-E-Buoy
STRIA Roadmaps
Transport electrification (ELT)
Transport mode
Multimodal icon
Transport policies
Environmental/Emissions aspects,
Decarbonisation
Transport sectors
Passenger transport,
Freight transport,
Micromobility

Overview

Link to CORDIS
Background & Policy context

The lif-E-Buoy project is a facility using the hydrokinetic energy of running water as a clean energy source for charging of electrical road vehicles (cars, bicycles, etc.) and provide noise and emission free electricity output for other applications such as large cruiser boats or for freight vessels stopping in city centres as a good alternative to running their generators.

Willisits Engineering Ltd. was established in 2009 to develop world-class electric vehicle drive systems and other innovative technologies. A few years ago we started the development of an underwater river power plant system (hydro generator) and in 2016 we built a prototype and demonstrated its operation in a relevant environment (river – TRL6). The development was a success but due to limited resources and other developments the commercialisation of it was put on hold.

Objectives

Recently we have received interest from companies who approached us with application areas for our technology. Namely, to use our hydro generator for the charging of electronic vehicles and to provide power for infrastructures located near (or on) rivers. Based on this interest we carried out an initial market study and found that there is serious potential to use our existing results and focus it on this new application.

We have decided to apply for SME Instrument Phase 1 funding to carry out a feasibility study in order to strengthen our initial findings and based on the outcome proceed for Phase 2 to produce the first commercial hydro powered electric vehicle charging station.

Funding

Parent Programmes
Institution Type
Public institution
Type of funding
Public (EU)
Specific funding programme
H2020-EU.3.4.
H2020-EU.2.1.1.
H2020-EU.2.3.1.
Other Programme
SMEInst-10-2016-2017 Small business innovation research for Transport and Smart Cities Mobility

Results

Hydrokinetic energy from running water cleanly charges electrical vehicles

lif-E-Buoy takes advantage of the natural hydrokinetic energy of running water - abundantly available in most river-based urban centres - to generate clean energy for electric vehicles and infrastructure.

EU-supported for the lif-E-Buoy project has enabled researchers to undertake a feasibility study into the production of the first commercial hydro powered electric vehicle (EV) charging stations.

While the steady flow of water lif-E-Buoy utilises fits well with the overnight charging of stationary EVs, especially appealing to householders without a garage-held charger, the technology can be upgraded to match the faster charge requirements of taxi and bus fleets.

Preliminary partnership discussions with fuel retailer https://molgroup.info/en/ (MOL Group), operating almost 2 000 petrol stations across Central and Eastern Europe, has further convinced lif-E-Bouy that its solution will become integral to mobility plans for smart cities.

The hydrokinetic technology

Positioned against the direction of flow, just above the riverbed bottom, lif-E-Buoy operates similarly to existing hydro generators, but with its innovative design affording numerous advantages.

Existing turbines have large rotor diameters and short bodies, meaning they have to be placed in deep waters. However, as project coordinator Mr Vilmos Willisits explains, “With our generator, the rotary motion converter has a special blade system, arranged in a cone-shape, reducing its diameter and elongating its shape. This allows conversion without loss of torque, usable in shallower rivers.” lif-E-Buoy can be installed in riverbeds with widths of 20 m and at water depths of 4 m.

The current generator does not suffer from wearing problems related to mechanical friction, as it does not use coupling accelerator gearing, but instead the so-called louvre system to transfer the energy. These frictionless bearings offer longer lifetime for parts, reducing costs.

While lif-E-Buoy is fixed to a stabilising structure, its in-built automatic buoyancy allows it to move into stronger currents. The running water generates a torque on the rotor that drives the electric generator, with the electricity generated transported along a cable to the river bank to be fed into the local electric supply grid. Owing to the minimal infrastructure requirements, the device can be installed using a crane and can be easily, and cost-effectively, relocated or repaired, also minimising the impact on the surrounding ecosystem.

Meeting transport targets

At the https://ec.europa.eu/transport/themes/strategies/2011_white_paper_en (European Commission’s 2011 Transport White Paper’s) core is a drive for less congestion and fewer emissions by 2050. Those twin initiatives have resulted in commitments to phase out conventionally fuelled cars from cities, transfer medium distance intercity passenger and freight journeys from road to rail and waterborne transport, while reducing CO2 emissions by 60 %.

Without deeper EV penetration, current fuel efficiency standards and clean energy benefits cannot be met. With cost of use over an EV’s lifetime close to competitive against internal combustion engines (and the cost of lithium batteries ever reducing), cost parity is only a few years away. But while this makes mass adoption more likely, the main challenge will be establishing widespread charging infrastructure.

Fortunately, there are plans for a commercially viable Charging Point network and with typical payback for network operators within the five to eight-year range, this is now beginning to attract investment.

As Willisits says, “The EU’s policies are an invitation to break the shackles of transport’s dependency on oil, without sacrificing efficiency. Lif-E-Buoy will help provide green fuel for transportation! The EV market offers a huge opportunity for us, the only unknown is how EV regulations might evolve over time.”

Partners

Lead Organisation
Organisation
Willisits Mernokiroda Korlatolt Felelossegu Tarsasag
Address
KISBER, SZECHENYI UTCA 22, 2870, Hungary
EU Contribution
€50 000

Technologies

Technology Theme
Electric road vehicles
Technology
Public charging infrastructure
Development phase
Research/Invention

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