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An Efficient Wireless Power Transfer System to Balance the State of Charge of Electric Vehicles

25

Citations

27

References

2016

Year

Abstract

As an alternate form in the road transportationsystem, electric vehicle (EV) can help reduce the fossil-fuelconsumption. However, the usage of EVs is constrained by thelimited capacity of battery. Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) can increase the driving range of EVs by charging EVs inmotionwhen they drive through a wireless charging laneembedded in a road. The amount of power that can be suppliedby a charging lane at a time is limited. A problem here iswhen a large number of EVs pass a charging lane, how toefficiently distribute the power among different penetrationslevels of EVs? However, there has been no previous researchdevoted to tackling this challenge. To handle this challenge, wepropose a system to balance the State of Charge (called BSoC) among the EVs. It consists of three components: i) fog-basedpower distribution architecture, ii) power scheduling model, and iii) efficient vehicle-to-fog communication protocol. The fogcomputing center collects information from EVs and schedulesthe power distribution. We use fog closer to vehicles ratherthan cloud in order to reduce the communication latency. Thepower scheduling model schedules the power allocated to eachEV. In order to avoid network congestion between EVs and thefog, we let vehicles choose their own communication channelto communicate with local controllers. Finally, we evaluateour system using extensive simulation studies in NetworkSimulator-3, MatLab, and Simulation for Urban MObilitytools, and the experimental results confirm the efficiency ofour system.

References

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