Title :
PHEV control strategy including vehicle to home (V2H) and home to vehicle (H2V) functionalities
Author :
Berthold, F. ; Blunier, B. ; Bouquain, D. ; Williamson, S. ; Miraoui, A.
Author_Institution :
Transp. & Syst. Lab. (SeT), Univ. of Technol. of Belfort-Montbeliard, Belfort-Montbéliard, France
Abstract :
Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs) are seen to be a step forward in vehicle electrification, to replace ICE-based conventional vehicles. On the one hand, using a PHEV means that a part of the vehicle energy comes from the grid or other sources, such as renewable energy, to charge the battery. On the other hand, increasing the number of nuclear and coal power plants to supply these new needs would shift the problem to another place, and will not permit solving the problem of pollution or fossil fuel depletion. The main idea presented in this paper consists in sharing the production between the home and the vehicle and use at the same time the vehicle to supply power to the home appliances during the electricity peak demand (i.e., when the prices are the highest). In this study, a general control strategy is designed, taking into account the overall system (grid, local production from renewable, and vehicle, including its battery). Furthermore, a simulation, including the household daily power profile and the PHEV drive cycle is presented. The home power profile takes into account photovoltaic (PV) and wind production as well as home load profile based on real data. The objective of the control strategy is to minimize the total energy cost.
Keywords :
coal; energy storage; hybrid electric vehicles; nuclear power stations; power generation control; power generation scheduling; thermal power stations; PHEV control; PHEV drive cycle; coal power plants; electricity peak demand; fossil fuel depletion; home load profile; home power profile; home to vehicle functionality; household daily power profile; nuclear power plants; photovoltaic production; plug-in hybrid electric vehicles; renewable energy; vehicle electrification; vehicle to home functionality; wind production; Batteries; Fuels; Ice; Production; Renewable energy resources; System-on-a-chip; Vehicles; Control strategy; electric vehicles; power generation scheduling; vehicle power systems;
Conference_Titel :
Vehicle Power and Propulsion Conference (VPPC), 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-248-6
Electronic_ISBN :
Pending
DOI :
10.1109/VPPC.2011.6043120