- SmILE
SmILE is a showcase
car designed forGreenpeace in 1996 to demonstrate howfuel efficient a car can be. The name stands for "Small, Intelligent, Light, Efficient'. It is based on theRenault Twingo , halving its fuel consumption to 3.3 l/100km (30 km/l or 85 mpg (imperial) / 68mpg (US)). The importance of this is that cars represent more than half the world's oil consumption (contributing about 20% to the world's greenhouse gas emissions), that the number of cars in the world is rising at twice the rate of the population growth and that car manufacturers were making little effort to develop more fuel efficient carsFact|date=September 2008.An important issue in the design was that it should use off-the-shelf technology (parts and knowhow). As a result, in mass production it should not cost significantly more than a 'heavier' equivalent. The engine should even be cheaper because it is made of fewer parts. However, parts that would be more expensive are
supercharging (be itpressure wave supercharger orturbo-supercharger ) and the wheels and the wheel suspension, which are made of aluminium.The major changes made to the Twingo are:
* 23% lighter (650kg instead of 845 kg):
** 80 kg less because of a smaller engine and lighter peripherals (battery, radiator and exhaust system)
** 80 kg less in vehicle interior and chassis through lighter seat structures (aluminium /plastic ) and lighter metals for wheel suspensions, drum brakes, brake calliper and rims. To keep the cost down, no exotic materials (such astitanium screws or carbon gear boxes) were used.
** lighter wheels, which also have a rolling resistance that is 35% lower.
* Less air resistance, with a 30% improvement in the wind tunnel (Cw value (drag coefficient ) down from 0.37 to 0.25)Fact|date=May 2008
* A smaller and more efficient engine, a superchargedtwo-cylinder four-stroke internal combustion engine withfour-valve technology in a boxer arrangement. A maximumtorque of 75N·m results from aswept volume of 358 cm3 at 2,900rpm . The dynamic pressure supercharger makes sure the engine runs most efficiently at normal operating speeds. Most car engines are designed for optimum performance at maximum speed and load, which are in reality rarely used. At 55 bhp, the engine has the same performance as the original Twingo. Other performance parameters, such asmaximum speed , elasticity andacceleration are the same or better.The main consumption change of the engine stems from its more frequent use in the higher load range, which results in higher
thermal stress . This is compensated for by an ingenious cooling system. The meanpiston velocities are in the customary range. The use of the latest technologies in materials and surface coatings guarantees stability of piston rings and cylinder bearing surfaces despite the higher pressures due to supercharging.At least a further 80 kg weight reduction could be achieved through the use of fibre
composite material s, a smaller tank and replacing the glass windows withpolycarbonate . A further redesign could improve the fuel consumption even more, such as an even smaller engine, further weight savings, improving theaerodynamics (e.g., through a smaller rear interior), automaticinertia utilisation or engine switch-off systems,regenerative braking , etc.The changes did not alter the safety standards of the Twingo and the
airbag and lateral collision protection were kept in place.Aluminium accounts for 45 kg of the weight of the SmILE (7%), through replacement of both axles, wheel suspension and seat structure. In average cars in Europe this is 65 kg (6%) and rising. One problem with aluminium is the high energy cost of primary production. However, recycled aluminium has a much lower energy cost and identical mechanical properties.In
Germany , around 10% of all cars are replaced annually by new vehicles, so if all new vehicles had the SmILE standard that would mean an annual reduction of the CO2 emissions of the car fleet by 5%.A similar reduction in fuel consumption would be possible for all
petrol cars, but notdiesel s because they are heavier (and require heavier batteries). The Twingo was chosen because of its favourable ratio between internal space and exterior and because it is a reasonable all-round car for everyone (it is the most imported car in Germany).Greenpeace says that ultimately, this car is not a definitive solution. Reduction of the number of cars is still necessary, also to reduce other problems, such as
traffic jam s, the emission of toxic substances in cities, the death toll on roads (over a million per year) and the destruction (and carving up) of nature to build roads.Alternative fuels would be a better solution, but time is pressing, so an intermediate off-the-shelf solution like the SmILE is needed.The car was designed by the Swiss company of
Wenko . For this, they received a loan of roughly 1.3 millioneuro from Greenpeace, which they will return if the engine concept is taken over by a manufacturer for series production or profits are obtained from issuing licences.ee also
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Eco-marathon External links
* [http://archive.greenpeace.org/climate/smile/tech/table.html technical data]
* [http://archive.greenpeace.org/climate/smile/tech/index.html technical details]
* [http://archive.greenpeace.org/climate/smile/faq/faq3.html design]
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