DocumentCode :
648002
Title :
Understanding the effects of electric vehicle charging on the distribution voltages
Author :
Dubey, Anamika ; Santoso, Surya ; Cloud, Matthew P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
21-25 July 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
This paper evaluates effects of the distribution circuit parameters on the primary and secondary circuit voltages due to EV loads. The distribution circuit parameters considered here are; location of the service transformer with respect to the substation and location of the EV loads within the secondary service. The voltage analysis is carried out using a 13.8 kV distribution feeder dominated by residential loads. The study reveals that EV charging affects the secondary voltage more significantly than the primary voltage. The short-circuit capacity even at the remote end of the primary distribution line is adequately high; hence, preventing EV loads from affecting its primary voltage. When four 240V/16A EV loads in a secondary service nearby and remote from the substation are charging, the additional voltage drops in their respective primary voltages are 0.023% and 0.13%. However, because the short-circuit capacity at the secondary service wire for both locations (remote/nearby) is significantly lower, additional voltage drops of approximately 4.5% occur in the secondary service voltages. The study also reveals that a single EV load installed on a distant load node from a service transformer leads to comparatively higher additional voltage drop (1.7%) than an EV on a nearby load node (0.81%) in the same secondary service.
Keywords :
electric vehicles; power distribution lines; power transformers; short-circuit currents; EV loads; current 16 A; distant load node; distribution circuit parameters; distribution feeder; distribution voltages; electric vehicle charging effect; primary circuit voltages; primary distribution line; residential loads; secondary circuit voltages; service transformer; short-circuit capacity; substation; voltage 13.8 kV; voltage 240 V; voltage analysis; voltage drops; Batteries; Electric vehicles; Load modeling; Loading; Shape; Substations; Wires; distribution system analysis; electric vehicle; power quality; voltage fluctuation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power and Energy Society General Meeting (PES), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
ISSN :
1944-9925
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PESMG.2013.6672557
Filename :
6672557
Link To Document :
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