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Study compares drone energy usage to diesel trucks and electric vehicles to determine if the technology saves money

The truck routing model finds optimal routes to deliver goods as well as optimizing the number of trucks to be used. The images show customer locations and FCs for both the drone delivery and the truck delivery cases. The truck delivery map depicts customers served by a depot. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory

Are drones really energy efficient? That depends on the average wind speed. An Argonne study compares drone energy usage to diesel trucks and electric vehicles and aims to help industry determine if they could save money with drone delivery.

According to a new study from the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory drones can consume as much as either electric vehicles or diesel trucks to transport e-commerce goods, depending on wind conditions. Argonne has developed new capabilities designed to help industry leaders identify suitable drone delivery locations by comparing the energy consumption of unmanned aerial with conventional diesel and battery electric vehicles.

The models are based on Argonne’s analysis of regional energy consumption and facility costs of direct delivery drones under various wind speed scenarios.

Analyzing the Chicago metropolitan area, researchers found that on an average day, direct delivery drones required approximately the same energy as electric vehicles. On a very windy day, drones needed 15% more energy than diesel trucks.

Analysis of wind speeds unpacks the story. Drones used less energy than diesel trucks until the wind speed reached 20 miles per hour; however, wind speed needed to reach only 10 miles an hour before drones began to use more energy than electric vehicles. The Chicago study considered extreme cases, where drones would directly face the wind both from the depot to customers and on their return commutes.

Researchers note drone readiness depends not solely on measuring energy consumption but weighing a combination of monetary, environmental and energy factors. Ideal drone deployment could be in tandem with other vehicles—for example, drones released from a truck’s roof for the last mile delivery with advanced vehicle routing algorithms evaluating wind impact to identify optimal drone release locations.

Researchers will continue to help companies decide where and how to deploy delivery drones based on uncertain customer demand, weather conditions and technology evolution.

“Companies should acknowledge the upcoming energy costs while they make investments into drone delivery,” says Taner Cokyasar, a consultant in Argonne’s Transportation and Power Systems division.

“This is very exciting research, and we need more research like this to better understand the energy consumption of drones and how best to use them,” Juan Zhang, assistant professor at University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, wrote on LinkedIn in early January. Her January 2021 paper, “Energy consumption models for delivery drones: a comparison and assessment,” charted a course for the Argonne study by reviewing drone energy consumption models and making difficult to digest complicated models easier to follow.

Cokyasar is co-author of the Chicago metropolitan area drone research paper “Comparing regional energy consumption for direct drone and truck deliveries,” published Jan. 12 in Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board.

More information:
Taner Cokyasar et al, Comparing Regional Energy Consumption for Direct Drone and Truck Deliveries, Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board (2023). DOI: 10.1177/03611981221145137

Provided by
Argonne National Laboratory


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Study compares drone energy usage to diesel trucks and electric vehicles to determine if the technology saves money (2023, March 2)
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