Yes, it is possible to have heterogenous inputs into a motor/controller.
- energy cells and power cells in a hybrid battery
- fuel cell and battery
- engine/generator (Volt) and battery
- super-caps and battery
liveforphysics (engineer @ Zero) wrote a pretty good post detailing why super-capacitors aren't a good match with a battery pack. Short version: super-caps weigh too much and a well-designed battery pack delivers plenty of power for vehicle applications. Noone ever accused an Empulse RR (small power pack) or a Tesla Model S (large energy pack) of being short on power..
https://www.elmoto.net/showthread.php?2732-How-about-adding-a-capacitor-in-parallel-to-my-current-battery-pack-to-boost-power&p=34574&viewfull=1#post34574As for hybrid cell pack, this is possible as well.
Consider the following two cells:
EIG C020 energy cell
- 3.7 V 20 Ah 0.43 kg
- 174 Wh/kg 1463 W/kg (@ 15% voltage sag, 10C)
EIG F007 power cell
- 3.2 V 7 Ah 0.25 kg
- 95 Wh/kg 2300 W/kg (@ 15% voltage sag, 30C)
When you build a hybrid pack, you have to worry about matching the battery voltage, etc. Ignore that for a minute.
Suppose you want to build a pack to supply 100 kW peak.
- 100% of power from F007. 100 kW, 4.1 kWh, 43.5 kg (95 Wh/kg)
- 50% of power from C020, 50% from F007. 100 kW, 8.0 kWh, 56.0 kg (143 Wh/kg)
- 100% of power from C020. 100 kW, 11.9 kWh, 68.4 kg (174 Wh/kg)
Now, the power pack is definitely lighter. And sometimes, light weight is of paramount importance.
But consider this:
- going from the pure power to the hybrid pack adds 3.9 kWh, 12.5 kg (300+ Wh per kg added)
- going from the hybrid to the pure energy pack adds 3.9 kWh, 12.5 kg (300+ Wh per kg added)
Ignoring the complexity of the hybrid pack, in most vehicle applications where you care about both energy and power, you're generally better served by a homogenous pack.