Transportation and Energy
Sponsored by
ITS-Irvine
Time
04/16/2010 10:30 AM (PDT)
Location
4080 AIR Building
Tim M. Brown
Advanced Power & Energy Program, University of California, Irvine
Abstract
In the United States, and increasingly the world, the automobile is
indispensable to economic and personal mobility needs. Unfortunately,
utilization of personal vehicles is currently entirely dependent on the
combustion of petroleum energy sources. Consequently, cars are a major
contributor to urban air quality problems, are the leading emitter of
greenhouse gases in car-crazy societies like California, and rely on a
diminishing supply of oil from geopolitically sensitive areas. As
global demand for mobility continues to increase, new energy sources and
new vehicle powertrains must be developed and commercialized that can
both appeal to consumers and mitigate the environmental side effects of
transportation.