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Deployment priority of public charging speeds for increasing battery electric vehicle usability

by Wan Li, Zhenhong Lin, Shiqi Ou, Boyu Wang
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment
Publication Date
Page Number
103943
Volume
124
Issue
1

To inform charger deployment decisions, this paper aims to understand the potential utilization and deployment priority for public charging infrastructure. A data-driven Cumulative Public Recharging (CPR) model is developed to explore the travel patterns by using 2017 National Household Travel Survey data. Given the daily trip sequence, trip distance, and dwell times, the study examines the daily expected driving range and BEV feasibility under different charging speeds, battery capacity, and charging behaviors. The results suggest that more advanced public chargers increase the daily expected driving range. Home charging is sufficient for most daily short-distance trips while public chargers are still needed for medium- and long-distance trips. Extreme fast charging (xFC) may not be necessary for people with home charging but could be more useful for people without home charging and for urgent charging. xFC becomes even less important to drivers with longer BEV ranges, a finding that contradicts conventional thinking.