scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Decentralized Charging Control of Large Populations of Plug-in Electric Vehicles

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This paper develops a strategy to coordinate the charging of autonomous plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) using concepts from non-cooperative games and demonstrates that convergence to the Nash equilibrium occurs very quickly over a broad range of parameters.
Abstract
This paper develops a strategy to coordinate the charging of autonomous plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) using concepts from non-cooperative games. The foundation of the paper is a model that assumes PEVs are cost-minimizing and weakly coupled via a common electricity price. At a Nash equilibrium, each PEV reacts optimally with respect to a commonly observed charging trajectory that is the average of all PEV strategies. This average is given by the solution of a fixed point problem in the limit of infinite population size. The ideal solution minimizes electricity generation costs by scheduling PEV demand to fill the overnight non-PEV demand “valley”. The paper's central theoretical result is a proof of the existence of a unique Nash equilibrium that almost satisfies that ideal. This result is accompanied by a decentralized computational algorithm and a proof that the algorithm converges to the Nash equilibrium in the infinite system limit. Several numerical examples are used to illustrate the performance of the solution strategy for finite populations. The examples demonstrate that convergence to the Nash equilibrium occurs very quickly over a broad range of parameters, and suggest this method could be useful in situations where frequent communication with PEVs is not possible. The method is useful in applications where fully centralized control is not possible, but where optimal or near-optimal charging patterns are essential to system operation.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal decentralized protocol for electric vehicle charging

TL;DR: In this paper, a decentralized algorithm is proposed to optimally schedule electric vehicle (EV) charging, which exploits the elasticity of electric vehicle loads to fill the valleys in electric load profiles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric vehicles and smart grid interaction: A review on vehicle to grid and renewable energy sources integration

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a comprehensive review and assessment of the latest research and advancement of electric vehicles (EVs) interaction with smart grid portraying the future electric power system model.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Decentralized charging control for large populations of plug-in electric vehicles

TL;DR: The paper shows that under certain mild conditions, there exists a unique Nash equilibrium that almost satisfies the control objective to minimize electricity generation costs by establishing a PEV charging schedule that fills the overnight demand valley.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric vehicles standards, charging infrastructure, and impact on grid integration: A technological review

TL;DR: An evaluation on how the future EV development, such as connected vehicles, autonomous driving, and shared mobility, would affect EV grid integration as well as the development of the power grid moves toward future energy Internet is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric vehicle fleet management in smart grids: A review of services, optimization and control aspects

TL;DR: In this article, a review and classification of methods for smart charging (including power to vehicle and vehicle-to-grid) of electric vehicles for fleet operators is presented, and three control strategies and their commonly used algorithms are described.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

REGULAR ARTICLEPotential Games

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define and discuss several notions of potential functions for games in strategic form, and characterize games that have a potential function, and present a variety of applications.
Book

Fixed point theorems

D. R. Smart
Journal ArticleDOI

Achieving Controllability of Electric Loads

TL;DR: Conceptual frameworks for actively involving highly distributed loads in power system control actions and some of the challenges to achieving a load control scheme that balances device- level objectives with power system-level objectives are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large-Population Cost-Coupled LQG Problems With Nonuniform Agents: Individual-Mass Behavior and Decentralized $\varepsilon$ -Nash Equilibria

TL;DR: A state aggregation technique is developed to obtain a set of decentralized control laws for the individuals which possesses an epsiv-Nash equilibrium property and a stability property of the mass behavior is established.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Market Inefficiencies in California's Restructured Wholesale Electricity Market

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method for decomposing wholesale electricity payments into production costs, inframarginal competitive rents, and payments resulting from the exercise of market power, and find significant departures from competitive pricing, particularly during the high-demand summer months.
Related Papers (5)