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Power quality issues with high penetration of electric vehicle charging in distribution network

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dc.contributor.advisor Rodrigo, AS
dc.contributor.author Priyanka, VGC
dc.date.accessioned 2018-07-23T22:48:30Z
dc.date.available 2018-07-23T22:48:30Z
dc.identifier.citation Priyanka, V.G.C. (2018). Power quality issues with high penetration of electric vehicle charging in distribution network [Master’s theses, University of Moratuwa]. Institutional Repository University of Moratuwa. http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/13291
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/13291
dc.description.abstract Electric vehicles (EV) are becoming the most preferred and rapidly growing mode of transportation all around the world. Development of battery technologies and attention on residential scale renewable energy based distributed generation has accelerated the growth of the EV market. Commercial EV is equipped with energy storage, where a rechargeable battery is the most common type. EV Chargers are located either on board or off board. These chargers are present in different power levels. A regulated DC current shall be supplied to EV charging and the charging current is higher compared to conventional loads. Power electronic converters are used for the AC DC conversion thus a distorted current is drawn by the nonlinear load. This will give rise to power quality issues such as voltage unbalance, voltage fluctuations and harmonics on distribution systems. This research studies and quantifies the power quality impacts of the EV chargers on the distribution system. A detailed power electronic model of a commonly available EV charger is modelled in Matlab and a comprehensive current harmonic analysis is carried out in a standard IEEE LV distribution test feeder. The research focuses on the impact to the feeder with different EV penetration levels as well as different spatial load distribution. From the analysis it was determined for random EV distribution up to 40% of EV penetration is acceptable to the existing feeder at off peak intervals while only 30% is acceptable under nominal load condition as per IEEE 519 limits. If the EV chargers are clustered together, the current harmonic impact is higher and only 20% of EV penetration will be acceptable prescribed limits. The outcome of the research can be successfully used by distribution grid operators to determine to acceptable limits of EV penetration in the existing system. An algorithm encompassing the results of the study shall be employed in coordinated charging of electric vehicles where the operators shall dispatch the EVs based on the feeder loading and spatial distribution of EVs. Encompassed en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING-Dissertation en_US
dc.subject ELECTRIC VEHICLES (EV) en_US
dc.subject POWER QUALITY en_US
dc.subject EV PENETRATION en_US
dc.subject Power electronic converters en_US
dc.title Power quality issues with high penetration of electric vehicle charging in distribution network en_US
dc.type Thesis-Full-text en_US
dc.identifier.faculty Engineering en_US
dc.identifier.degree Master of Science in Electrical Engineering en_US
dc.identifier.department Department of Electrical Engineering en_US
dc.date.accept 2018-04
dc.identifier.accno TH3543 en_US


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