Abstract

Electric vehicles (EVs) are gaining attention due to their zero carbon emissions, but concerns about their reliability, especially critical components, persist. Previous research has primarily focused on EV drive motor reliability, neglecting the motor controller. To address this gap, this study assesses the reliability of the entire motor system in electric vans, including both drive motor and motor controller components. It predicts failure rates for these components, highlighting vulnerabilities and shortcomings in existing research, which can inform future design and maintenance. In addition, the integration of EVs and renewable energy resources has garnered attention, but concerns about component reliability have arisen. A novel approach called " Innovative Incentive-Driven Fuzzy Fault Tree Analysis " (IIFFTA) is introduced for power systems incorporating EVs and renewable energy, addressing vague and imprecise events and data deficiencies in conventional fault tree analysis. IIFFTA considers different component failure rates and probability values of fault occurrences, offering a more effective risk assessment method. Lastly, plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) impact distribution systems, and this paper explores distribution feeder reconfiguration (DFR) as a reliability-enhancing strategy for coordinating vehicle-to-grid (V2G) services from PEV fleets within a stochastic framework. The study accounts for uncertainties related to network demand, energy prices, wind power generation, and PEV fleet behavior, employing a self-adaptive evolutionary algorithm (SOS) to address the stochastic optimization problem.

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