The increasing penetration of electric vehicles (EVs) gradually evolves the urban transportation network (UTN) and power distribution network (PDN) from being independent to being coupled. To analyze the impact of… Click to show full abstract
The increasing penetration of electric vehicles (EVs) gradually evolves the urban transportation network (UTN) and power distribution network (PDN) from being independent to being coupled. To analyze the impact of drivers' behavior on the coupled network, and reveal the relationship between the two networks, a coupled traffic-distribution (CTD) model is proposed, in which the total traveling cost of UTN and the power service cost of PDN is minimized. In the CTD model, A stochastic user equilibrium traffic assignment problem (SUE-TAP) with elastic traffic demand and discrete path selection of drivers is formulated to capture the traffic flow distribution comprised of EVs and gasoline vehicles (GVs). An alternative current optimal power flow (ACOPF) model of PDN is utilized to provide the optimal charging price and scheduling plan. Besides, the SUE-TAP with nonlinear functions is difficult to solve, a novel piecewise linear approximation method is presented to deal with the nonlinear items of the SUE-TAP caused by drivers' traveling cost and traveling tendency incorporating perception. Incorporating the behavioral theory, a distributed coordination method derived from optimal condition decomposition is proposed for the coupled traffic-power network equilibrium. The proposed distributed scheme is examined using a coupled network, which consists of a 20-road UTN and a 33-bus PDN. Numerical results demonstrate the effectiveness and practicability of the proposed model and the distributed coordination method.
               
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