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Cost-Effective Siting of Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure With Agent-Based Modeling

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date Published

03/2016

Authors

Sheppard, Colin, Andrew Harris, Anand R. Gopal

DOI

10.1109/TTE.2016.2540663(link is external)

Abstract

Plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) represent a significant opportunity for governments to reduce emissions of both air pollutants and greenhouse gases, in addition to reduce their dependency on foreign sources of energy. Comprehensive planning analysis prior to the rollout of electric vehicle charging stations (EVCS) can ensure that charging stations are effectively sited, providing the best returns on investment while also meeting critical service requirements. We present a detailed description of the PEV infrastructure (PEVI) model, a spatially explicit agent-based microsimulation model that represents charging infrastructure, charging behavior, competition for scarce EVCS, and driver adaptation. A differential evolution and a heuristic optimization scheme are compared in their ability to find a cost-effective distribution of EVCS. In addition, several key assumptions of the model are tested for their impact on critical outcomes. Results are presented from a case study in Delhi, India, that highlight the spatial distribution of chargers of different levels, the impact of several technical and policy trends on the need for EVCS, the spatiotemporal distribution of charging demand, and the technical potential for load shifting PEV demand.

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Transportation Electrification

Volume

2

Year of Publication

2016

Issue

2

Research Areas

Energy Analysis and Environmental Impacts Division, Sustainable Energy Systems

        

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