Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1750113 Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The penetration of plug-in electric and hybrid-electric vehicles (PEVs and PHEVs) will increase significantly in the next 20 years. The insertion of PEVs in households will facilitate the use of renewable sources and possibly create economic benefits to users, as shown in a Mexican example here presented, but also will introduce some challenges such as how the penetration of PEVs affect the quality of existing power grids. The contribution of this work is to review the literature in reference to the power quality problems and to test them in a real distribution system based on the Mueller community in Austin, Texas that has PEVs and photovoltaic panels (PVs). The results show that a coordinated delay charge mode reduces the loading on transformers at peak hours and improves voltage regulation. Additionally, it is shown that photovoltaic panels introduce a power factor reduction during daytime in the main feeder. Corrective measures should be considered for high levels of PV penetration, such as reactive power support, VAr compensators or community energy storage, which can be presented as one potential solution to most of the problems listed in current literature. However, more research needs to be done in a much broader scale because power systems differ from each other and between countries, but there is a consensus that high power demand by PEVs leads to voltage statutory violations at some points in the grid and smart charging is required to operate the system efficiently.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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