TY - JOUR
T1 - Performance enhancement and control strategy of a CO2 integrated direct cooling thermal management system using a coaxial scroll expander-compressor unit for electric vehicles
AU - Shi, Tianyi
AU - Song, Panpan
AU - Wei, Mingshan
AU - Zhuge, Weilin
AU - Zhang, Yangjun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2026/5/15
Y1 - 2026/5/15
N2 - To address the significant throttling losses and limited efficiency of transcritical CO2 cycles in high-temperature environments, this study comprehensively investigates a CO2 heat pump system with a novel coaxial corotating scroll expander-compressor unit (CSECU) for electric vehicle thermal management. Two integration architectures for cabin and battery cooling, Expansion-throttling integration (ETI) and Single Expansion Integration (SEI), are proposed and comparatively analyzed. For cabin cooling, the study reveals that the cooling capacity is primarily governed by the coaxial speed, and the coaxial effect restrains the discharge pressure increase, helping decouple control. Consequently, the CSECU performs better than the traditional system with a maximum coefficient of performance of 4.41, 3.80, and 3.45 at 35, 37.5, and 40 °C. For the cabin and battery cooling, SEI demonstrates superior performance, achieving a maximum COP of 4.26, 3.77, and 3.52, higher than 3.51, 3.03, and 2.72 for ETI. This performance enhancement is attributed to the optimized utilization of latent heat at the battery cooling plate (due to lower inlet quality) and higher work recovery from the main refrigerant flow. Dynamic simulations under the World Light Vehicle Test Cycle (WLTC) confirm that the SEI strategy not only cools the battery to the target 25 °C(1064.2 s) but also controls the cell temperature difference less than 2.06 °C(14.2% lower) and operates consistently within a high-efficiency COP range of 4.10–4.30(19.1% higher), resulting in significant energy savings for the vehicle.
AB - To address the significant throttling losses and limited efficiency of transcritical CO2 cycles in high-temperature environments, this study comprehensively investigates a CO2 heat pump system with a novel coaxial corotating scroll expander-compressor unit (CSECU) for electric vehicle thermal management. Two integration architectures for cabin and battery cooling, Expansion-throttling integration (ETI) and Single Expansion Integration (SEI), are proposed and comparatively analyzed. For cabin cooling, the study reveals that the cooling capacity is primarily governed by the coaxial speed, and the coaxial effect restrains the discharge pressure increase, helping decouple control. Consequently, the CSECU performs better than the traditional system with a maximum coefficient of performance of 4.41, 3.80, and 3.45 at 35, 37.5, and 40 °C. For the cabin and battery cooling, SEI demonstrates superior performance, achieving a maximum COP of 4.26, 3.77, and 3.52, higher than 3.51, 3.03, and 2.72 for ETI. This performance enhancement is attributed to the optimized utilization of latent heat at the battery cooling plate (due to lower inlet quality) and higher work recovery from the main refrigerant flow. Dynamic simulations under the World Light Vehicle Test Cycle (WLTC) confirm that the SEI strategy not only cools the battery to the target 25 °C(1064.2 s) but also controls the cell temperature difference less than 2.06 °C(14.2% lower) and operates consistently within a high-efficiency COP range of 4.10–4.30(19.1% higher), resulting in significant energy savings for the vehicle.
KW - CO heat pump
KW - CoaxialExpander-compressor
KW - Control strategy
KW - DirectCooling
KW - Electric vehicle
KW - Integrated thermal management
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105035026267
U2 - 10.1016/j.enconman.2026.121388
DO - 10.1016/j.enconman.2026.121388
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105035026267
SN - 0196-8904
VL - 356
JO - Energy Conversion and Management
JF - Energy Conversion and Management
M1 - 121388
ER -