The electrification of tractors can increase the self-supply of renewable energy produced on the farm and reduce the operating costs of tractors. However, electric tractors face higher upfront costs than their diesel counterparts, as well as limited operating time. A drivetrain that is highly efficient in a wide range of agricultural applications reduces operating costs and enables long operating times. Thus, we propose a method to design electric tractor drivetrain configurations that incorporates longitudinal dynamic simulations to enable the development of such efficient drivetrains. To represent a diverse application profile, we include real-world load cycles recorded from a 104 kW diesel tractor. Our investigation focuses on the axle-individual drivetrain topology (eAxle) and the central motor topology as the configurations that offer the most promising trade-off between efficiency and complexity. The design method includes the top-down design of the topology including its individual components, such as the inverter, motor, and transmission, which are varied based on the load. Our method derives drivetrains with average efficiencies of 83% for an axle-individual topology with two gears. With a 100 kWh battery, such a drivetrain enables operating times of 7.5 h when fertilizing and 2.4 h when seeding.
Götz et al. (Thu,) studied this question.