DocumentCode
116246
Title
Scheduling and cooperative control of electric vehicles´ charging at highway service stations
Author
Gusrialdi, Azwirman ; Zhihua Qu ; Simaan, Marwan A.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
15-17 Dec. 2014
Firstpage
6465
Lastpage
6471
Abstract
Due to their limited ranges, electric vehicles (EVs) need to be periodically charged during their long-distance travels on a highway. Compared to the fossil-fuel powered vehicles, the charging of a single EV takes much more time (up to 30 mins versus 2 mins). As the number of EVs on highways increases, adequate charging infrastructure needs to be put in place. Nonetheless waiting times for EVs to get charged at service stations could still vary significantly unless an appropriate scheduling coordination is in place and individual EVs make correct decisions about their choice of charging locations. This paper attempts to address both the system-level scheduling problem and the individual control problem, while requiring only distributed information about EVs and their charging at service stations along a highway. Specifically, we first develop a higher-level distributed scheduling algorithm to optimize the operation of the overall charging network. The scheduling algorithm uses only local information of traffic flows measured at the neighboring service stations (nodes), and it aims at adjusting the percentage of the EVs to be charged at individual stations so that all the charging resources along the highway are well (uniformly) utilized and the total waiting time is minimized. Then, a lower level cooperative control law is designed for individual EVs to decide whether or not it should charge its battery when approaching a specific service station by meeting the published scheduling level while taking into account its own battery constraint. Analytical designs are presented and their performance improvement is illustrated using simulation.
Keywords
control system synthesis; electric vehicles; road traffic control; road vehicles; EV; analytical designs; battery constraint; charging locations; cooperative control; distributed scheduling algorithm; electric vehicle charging; fossil-fuel powered vehicles; highway service stations; individual control problem; local information; long-distance travels; performance improvement; system-level scheduling problem; traffic flows; Batteries; Charging stations; Road transportation; Scheduling; Scheduling algorithms; Steady-state; Vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Decision and Control (CDC), 2014 IEEE 53rd Annual Conference on
Conference_Location
Los Angeles, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-7746-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CDC.2014.7040403
Filename
7040403
Link To Document