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The RS Q3 combines a unique lifestyle and the benefits of an SUV with quattro technology and a thrilling five-cylinder design that is deeply rooted in motorsport history. The result is nothing less than a sporty redefinition of crossover cars.

With its enhanced-performance engine, the new Audi RS Q3 performance is a highly dynamic SUV with an unmistakably athletic character. It combines striking design with extraordinary signature features.

Asphalt or ice, urban traffic or snow-covered forest roads: Vorsprung is at its most impressive when it is able to tackle extreme conditions head-on. The turbocharged 2.5-liter TFSI engine has a power output of 250 kW (340 PS) – reliably brought to the roads by permanent quattro four wheel drive.

Superlative performance with five cylinders, in combination with even more dynamic driving: the Audi RS Q3 performance. The power output of the 2.5-liter TFSI engine from the RS Q3 has been increased to 270 kW (367 PS). This allows the car to sprint from 0 to 100 km/h in just 4.4 seconds.

Article source: www.audi.com

Piloted driving on the autobahn – Audi is already providing the public with an insight into the mobility of the future. With demonstration drives on board an Audi A7 piloted driving concept, selected brand customers and fans will get their first experience of piloted driving on the A9 north of Munich.

Even more distinctive, sportier and faster: The new Audi Sport Performance Parts take dynamic handling to a wholly new level for the Audi R8 (combined fuel consumption in l/100 km: 12.3 – 11.4*; combined CO2 emissions in g/km: 287 – 272*) sports car and the Audi TT. The retrofit range will be available in dealers in late summer 2017 and features numerous components.

Audi represents Vorsprung durch Technik. That means thinking today about the future of mobility. But it’s not just a question of design or performance – it’s also a question of how to power our cars to get from A to B. And from today to tomorrow.


We are pushing forward innovations in this area: not simply by building efficient engines, but also by developing alternative drive and mobility concepts. By also seeking inspiration from nature for new sources of power that allow us to travel new paths. An innovative contribution to this goal is made by our Audi g-tron models – in combination with Audi e-gas. One example is the Audi A5 Sportback g-tron1: 80% less CO2/km with Audi e-gas technology purely in gas mode (CNG) on a well-to-wheel assessment (a calculation of emissions that includes both the production of fuel and the running of a vehicle) compared with the Audi A5 Sportback 2.0 TFSI2with 140 kW. As a g-tron customer, you can refuel as usual at any CNG filling station. AUDI AG ensures that the total amount of gas consumed by the vehicle, calculated on the basis of legal standards for measuring fuel consumption and emissions as per NEDC/WLTP and statistical data on the annual mileage of Audi g-tron models that were ordered during the period 7 March 2017 to 31 May 2018 is replaced by Audi e-gas – for a period of three years after first registration as a new vehicle (the amount of CO2 saved is also calculated on this basis and may be lower in actual practice when running the vehicle). The Audi e-gas is fed into the European natural gas network, replacing fossil natural gas.


Another step towards our vision of premium carbon-neutral mobility.

With the Audi g-tron models and Audi e-gas as fuel from our own production sites and from partner facilities, the approach we are taking for our drive solutions isn’t just a matter of efficient engines, but also of the ecology of the entire energy system. A matter of enabling mobility that’s innovative before the vehicle has even driven a single metre. That’s the idea behind “Vorsprung starts before you drive”. And behind the combination of Audi g-tron and Audi e-gas. Find out more about our holistic drive concept here.

Audi e-gas is a fuel that we developed in our own production facilities. It is made using renewable energy sources, water, CO2 and waste materials. Various processes are used to extract CO2 from the atmosphere, which is then converted into Audi e-gas by biomethane and power-to-gas plants. The power-to-gas plants split water into hydrogen and oxygen exclusively using renewable energy. The oxygen is released into the air and the hydrogen reacts with CO2from the biomethane plant to form methane: our Audi e-gas. The biomethane plants demonstrably only use waste materials in which CO2 is also bound. This gives Audi e-gas an important advantage: the exact overall amount of CO2 that is emitted by the vehicle according to standard consumption is bound in the fuel. The additional CO2 emissions generated by the construction of the fuel plants, transport and compression of the fuel at filling stations are included, so that on an overall assessment CO2 emissions can be reduced by 80%3. That means we don’t just focus on efficient fuel consumption, but also on the production of the fuel itself.


Back in 2013, Audi commissioned the world’s first industrial-scale power-to-gas plant: the Audi e-gas plant in Werlte. For the first time, large quantities of fluctuating energy generated from wind and solar power could be stored in the natural gas grid on a long-term basis. Very effective, because the expansion of fluctuating energy sources like wind means that it’s increasingly common for excess power to be generated. The power-to-gas process makes use of this excess power as fuel for mobility, which is why we believe the Audi e-gas project can be a crucial element and driver of energy transition.


Alongside this solution for the g-tron fleet, we are also working to develop other synthetic liquid fuels that could have a potential to reduce CO2 that is similar to Audi e-gas. We call them Audi e-fuels. One example is Audi e-benzin, which is currently under development – and is already being tested in our Audi models.

Article source: www.audi.com

 

An all-electric automobile that can be refueled in four minutes – the Audi h-tron quattro concept eliminates the still excessive charging time of normal electric vehicles. A fuel cell powers the concept study. It generates electricity from hydrogen – a gas which Audi can manufacture CO₂-neutrally in its own power-to-gas plant using green electricity. As such, the company is making an unusual proposal for the mobility of the future.

The Audi h-tron quattro concept, which made its debut in early 2016, presents the fifth generation of fuel cell technology from Audi and Volkswagen. Lightweight materials reduce the weight and improve performance, responsiveness and service life. With an efficiency rating in excess of 60 percent, the fuel cell now comfortably surpasses any combustion engine.

The fuel-cell stack comprising 330 individual cells is housed in the forward structure of the technology study. It is powered using hydrogen. Three tanks are located under the passenger cell or the trunk and store sufficient gas at a pressure of 700 bar for a range of up to 600 kilometers. As with a car with a combustion engine, the tanks can be fully refueled in around four minutes.

Ideally complementing the fuel cell that develops 110 kW, there is a compact lithium-ion battery. It is housed under the passenger cell and delivers up to 100 kW power, which provides an additional boost while accelerating. Fuel cell and battery combined deliver a system output of 185 kW. The power from the fuel cell and the high-voltage battery drives two electric motors – one located on the front axle, the other on the rear axle. This innovative all-wheel concept makes the technology study an electrified Audi quattro.

In the European NEDC comparison cycle the Audi h-tron quattro concept consumes around one kilogram of hydrogen per 100 kilometers. It is not only locally, but also globally almost emission-free – provided the gas in the tank is produced using green electricity, as the company does in the Audi e‑gas plant in Lower Saxony.

AUDI AG is responsible for the development of fuel cells within the Volkswagen Group; the Group branch office is based at the Ingolstadt site. The Neckarsulm site is being expanded as a competence center for the development of the h-tron technology. With the Audi A7 Sportback h-tron quattro prototype vehicle, Audi has the opportunity to enter the volume-production process once the market and infrastructure justify such a move. The company is therefore committed to expanding the filling station infrastructure.

Article source: www.audi.com