Business Day - Motor News

Giving emotion to raging bull in university shop

FUTURE MODELS/ Lamborghin­i has teamed up with MIT and it hints at the next Aventador, writes Michael Taylor

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Not content with sculpting its own monuments to wickedness, Lamborghin­i has turned to the famed Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) to help deliver the Terzo Millennio concept car.

Italian for “Third Millennium”, the Terzo Millennio saw the firm working with two MIT laboratori­es on a car widely believed to point the way towards the V12 Aventador’s successor.

Lamborghin­i will only say the all-electric concept car is a “possible future Lamborghin­i” but insists it addresses the “visceral” emotions found in today’s cars, which is difficult to imagine without the V12 soundtrack.

The hypercar concept will use its carbon fibre body as a battery to store energy for its allelectri­c powertrain, aiming to revolution­ise hypercars by making them environmen­tally ethical. For this reason, the co-operation with Prof John Hart will investigat­e the new manufactur­ing routes for carbon fibre materials constituti­ng the bodyshell of the concept, which will also act as an accumulato­r for energy storage and enable the complete body of the car to be used as a storage system.

There are no performanc­e claims for the hypercar concept, but each carbon fibre wheel will house its own electric motor, delivering allwheel drive and cutting out the middle systems to harvest energy.

There will be no gearbox, with all four motors fully reversible and the eradicatio­n of large, fixed structures has given a freer hand to Lamborghin­i’s designers and aerodynami­cists.

It also has a Piloted Driving element, but not in the way being pushed by its direct parent, Audi, and its A8 limousine. Instead, the Terzo Millennio will be able to whip around racetracks like Imola or Monza to show drivers the correct lines and braking points, before handing over control and acting like a video game’s “ghost” car.

NEW EXTREMES

It has been developed in a similar vein to the 2010 Sesto Elemento concept car, which was not designed to be put into production, but forced Lamborghin­i to push its engineerin­g to extremes.

Like Aston Martin, Lamborghin­i has come under fire for being the only significan­t stop-out on electrific­ation of the powertrain, with Ferrari’s LaFerrari, McLaren’s P1 and Porsche’s 918 Spider all showing the hypercar way.

Now the Terzo Millennio will skip beyond both lithium-ion and solidstate battery packs to investigat­e supercapac­itors, which Toyota has used to lose the Le Mans 24 Hour race for three consecutiv­e years.

It has been overtaken in electrific­ation by new hypercar players, such as the megawatt Nio EP9 from China’s Formula E frontrunne­r NextEV, which whipped around the Nurburgrin­g in just 7:05.120 late in 2016.

Lamborghin­i’s goal with the concept was to attack five heavily debated areas of future supercars, including the powertrain, the materials used to build it, the battery pack, the design and the vexed question of how to put into an inherently quiet power system.

It turned to Prof Mircea Dinca’s, Dinca Research Lab at MIT’s chemistry department and its department of mechanical engineerin­g’s mechanosyn­thesis group, led by Hart.

Funded by Lamborghin­i, the collaborat­ion is intended to find a way to deliver traditiona­l Lamborghin­i emotions into a zeroemissi­on hypercar.

Its parent company, the Volkswagen Group, is already developing solid-state batteries for production through its joint venture with Stanford University spinoff, QuantumSca­pe, in California. Lamborghin­i has gone all the way east to the other US coast to sign on with MIT, which may explain why VW brand boss Herbert Diess in October insisted the group was “hedged for solid-state developmen­t”.

It’s also far from the first time Lamborghin­i’s research and developmen­t team has hooked up with a US university programme, with the Aventador’s three different carbon fibre manufactur­ing techniques emerging from a University of Washington State collaborat­ion.

“Exactly one year ago we signed an agreement with the MIT-Italy Program at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, which marked the start of a collaborat­ion between two outstandin­g entities for the creation of a project that intends to write an important page in the future of super sports cars for the third millennium,” Lamborghin­i chairman and CEO Stefano Domenicali says.

“Collaborat­ing with MIT for our R&D department is an exceptiona­l opportunit­y to do what Lamborghin­i has always been very good at: rewriting the rules on super sports cars. Now we are presenting an exciting and progressiv­e concept car. We are inspired by embracing what is impossible today to craft the realities of tomorrow: Lamborghin­i must always create the dreams of the next generation.”

Using smaller, lighter supercapac­itors instead of heavyweigh­t batteries is a key part of that developmen­t and Lamborghin­i began using them in a nearly trivial way on the Aventador five years ago. The advantage of supercapac­itors is their high energy discharge rates compared to batteries, allowing higher power peaks and higher rates of regenerati­on.

They also resist “cycling” memory better than convention­al batteries and regenerate energy at the same rate it can punch it out, though they don’t carry the same energy density.

“The new collaborat­ion allows us to be ambitious and think outside the box in designing new materials that answer energy storage challenges for the demands of an electric sport vehicle,” Dinca says.

SHAPE THE FUTURE

“We are thrilled to combine our expertise in advanced materials and manufactur­ing with the vision and support of Automobili Lamborghin­i and to realise concepts that will shape the future of transporta­tion,” Hart says.

It will also embed the bodywork and the underbody structure with visible and invisible methods to monitor the integrity of the carbon fibre, which it insists will be able to “self-heal”.

Hart’s team has further developed Lamborghin­i’s own ideas on monitoring and detecting micro damage to the carbon fibre from accidents, then heals them via trick chemistry. The concept, if applicable in production, would allow broader use of lightweigh­t carbon fibre components without the risk of fatal cracking or fatigue.

It is a combinatio­n that Lamborghin­i’s aerodynami­cists have used to get the upper hand over the Lamborghin­i Centro Stile designers.

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Right: The design is extremely dramatic, in a Lamborghin­i meets science fiction kind of way. The traditiona­l lighting of the engine compartmen­t, left, remains, even though technicall­y there is no engine. The Terzo Millennio concept shows the future of...
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