Abstract

The paper investigates the Electric Vehicle Routing Problem with a non-linear concave and strictly monotonic increasing charging function. In the literature, the non-linear charging function is typically approximated by a piecewise linear charging function which does not overestimate the real charging function in any point. As the piecewise linear charging function underestimates the real state-of-charge in some points, such an approximation excludes feasible solutions from the solution space. To overcome this drawback we introduce a new method to determine a piecewise linear charging function overestimating the real charging function in a way that the area between both functions is minimized as well as an adaptation of a known linearization to include the piecewise linear charging function in a branch-and-cut approach. Thereby, we include infeasible solutions in the solution space. To declare them infeasible again we check every integer solution obtained in the branch-and-cut procedure and add an infeasible path cut if the solution is infeasible for the real charging function such that the procedure terminates with an optimal solution for the real charging function. Our approach is evaluated in a computational study in which instances with up to 100 customers were solved to optimality. Moreover, we evaluate the trade-off between a more complex model formulation due to more binary variables if the number of supporting points for the piecewise linear approximation is increased and the higher approximation error if fewer supporting points are used.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call