Abstract

This paper provides a full study of a photovoltaic (PV)-aided plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (PHEV) charging facility by investigating the two most challenging technical issues: 1) sizing of the local energy storage (LES) unit and 2) control strategies of the facility. First, the paper proposes a method for determining the optimal size of LES for a charging facility. Second, the paper develops a control strategy for the integration of the PHEV charging stations with the proposed LES and PVs. The proposed LES-sizing method, which is based on optimal control theory, minimizes a cost function based on the average value of kilowatt-hour price, irradiance, and PHEVs' usage patterns. A power-loss/temperature-based battery model and a temperature-based charging strategy previously developed by the authors are utilized to determine the optimal LES size. Afterward, with the optimized facility parameters, a detailed circuit model of the charging facility, including PVs, PHEVs, and LES, is constructed with a real-time simulation system. While an experimental setup for this kind of complex and high-cost system was not readily feasible, real-time simulation was carried out to prove the effectiveness of the proposed control strategy. To validate the effectiveness and accuracy of the real-time simulation, control hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) and power-inverter-based experiments have been carried out at the subsystem level.

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