Power units and hybrid systems

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The modern Formula One power unit (PU) is a tightly integrated thermodynamic system consisting of a high-efficiency internal combustion engine (ICE) coupled with dual electric motor-generators and sophisticated control electronics. Since 2014, technical directives have enforced the hybridisation of propulsion systems, culminating in highly constrained yet optimised energy flow architectures.

System Overview[edit | edit source]

The hybrid PU comprises six core components:

  1. 1.6L V6 Turbocharged Internal Combustion Engine (ICE)
  2. Motor Generator Unit – Heat (MGU-H)
  3. Motor Generator Unit – Kinetic (MGU-K)
  4. Turbocharger (TC)
  5. Lithium-Ion Energy Store (ES)
  6. Control Electronics (CE)

Each of these interacts through an optimised **energy transfer map**, constrained by fuel flow limits, maximum energy deployment, and component degradation models.

Energy Conversion Flow Model[edit | edit source]

The PU’s energy efficiency can be modelled as a closed-loop system where input chemical energy is divided into mechanical, electrical, and waste heat outputs. Total efficiency \( \eta_{\text{PU}} \) is defined as:

Where:

  • = shaft output from ICE
  • = net deployable power from ERS
  • = \dot{m}_{\text{fuel}} \cdot LHV \)

- : fuel mass flow rate (kg/s), limited to 100 kg/h - LHV: Lower Heating Value of fuel (~42.6 MJ/kg)

ICE Output Modelling[edit | edit source]

Assuming ideal thermodynamic efficiency (Otto cycle), the ICE thermal efficiency is bounded by:

Where:

  • : compression ratio (~18:1 in F1 engines)
  • : specific heat ratio (~1.33 for gasoline-air mix)

Actual ICE output torque \( T \) is derived from:

With:

  • : brake mean effective pressure (BMEP)
  • : displacement volume (0.0016 m³)

Typical F1 ICE BMEP: ~20–24 bar under qualifying maps.

MGU-H Dynamic Transfer Model[edit | edit source]

The MGU-H converts thermal energy from turbocharger exhaust into electrical energy. In simplified terms:

- : specific heat capacity of exhaust gas (~1.1 kJ/kg·K)

- 30–38% in F1 conditions - MGU-H also regulates turbo RPM: up to 125,000 rpm

This electrical power is transferred either directly to the MGU-K or to the Energy Store (ES).

MGU-K Deployment Curve[edit | edit source]

The MGU-K harvests up to 120 kW during braking and redeploys up to 4 MJ per lap. Optimal deployment maximises traction-limited exit speed, particularly in low-speed corners.

MGU-K deployment strategy is defined by:

- : deployment status function - Controlled by SOC maps (State-of-Charge), ERS blending strategies, and gearshift timing

Thermomechanical Constraints[edit | edit source]

The efficiency of ERS is bottlenecked by:

  • Inverter thermal load: >100°C under regen
  • Lithium-ion battery discharge envelope (C-rate)
  • Charge air cooling effectiveness (for ICE knock control)

Heat rejection limits PU performance at high ambient tracks like Mexico City and Singapore. Engineers optimise:

  • Radiator inlet pressure drop
  • Intercooler latent capacity
  • Surface area vs frontal drag trade-off

Powertrain Efficiency Table[edit | edit source]

Subsystem Conversion Peak Efficiency (%)
ICE (Shell fuel) Chemical → Mechanical 49.8
MGU-H Heat → Electric 35–38
MGU-K Kinetic ↔ Electric 90–94
ES (Li-ion) Electrical Storage ~95
Combined Lap Efficiency Total energy recovery + delivery 46–50

Control Electronics and Mode Switching[edit | edit source]

PU logic is encoded in the Control Electronics (CE) unit, which handles:

  • Strat mode selection (maps torque, fuel mix)
  • SOC (State-of-Charge) ERS curves
  • Torque fill blending (MGU-K + ICE)
  • Traction-limited energy blending
  • Deployment overtake modes (e.g., Strat 10, Strat 5, ‘Attack’)

Teams run **lap-specific energy trace simulations** to maximise usable ERS within FIA constraints.

Future Regulation (2026) Impact Model[edit | edit source]

Changes in 2026 include:

  • Removal of MGU-H
  • MGU-K power tripled to ~350 kW
  • >50% of lap energy to be electric
  • Synthetic fuels mandated

These changes imply:

requiring reallocation of cooling mass flow, battery placement, and control logic redesign for KERS-only systems.

See Also[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  • FIA Technical Regulations 2024 & 2026 Draft
  • Mercedes-AMG HPP White Paper on PU Thermal Efficiency (2023)
  • AVL RACING: “PU Simulation Techniques under Budget Constraints”, 2022
  • Honda Racing Tech Briefing: MGU-H Torque and Vibration Suppression
  • Racecar Engineering (Vol. 33 No. 4): “Heat Rejection vs Aero Compromise”
  • AMuS Archives: “ERS Deployment by Circuit – Comparative Trends (2023)”