Electric bus charging scheduling problem considering charging infrastructure integrated with solar photovoltaic and energy storage systems
Journal article, 2024

Bus fleet electrification is crucial in reducing urban mobility carbon emissions, but it increases charging demand on the power grid. This study focuses on a novel battery electric bus (BEB) charging scheduling problem involving solar photovoltaic (PV) and battery energy storage facilities. A mixed integer linear programming model is formulated to schedule BEB charging and control solar PV energy simultaneously. The model handles a range of realistic considerations, including heterogeneous BEBs regarding battery capacities, peak net charging power costs, flexible charging powers, and multi-route-multi-depot scheduling. A key point of our model is the introduction of variable charging power decisions designed to align BEB charging demands with solar PV production. The optimization objective is to minimize the sum of charging costs, carbon emission costs, energy storage costs, and revenue (negative cost) from solar PV energy sales. The model empowers public transport agencies to swiftly generate daily BEB charging schedules given daily solar and weather variations. A case study is performed in Beijing, China, utilizing actual bus trajectory data, weather conditions, solar irradiance, and detailed built environment data of bus depots. The results show that the proposed model can significantly reduce the operating cost and shift the charging loads by improving solar PV energy utilization.

Bus charging scheduling

Peak net charging power

Mixed integer linear program

Carbon emissions

Solar photovoltaic energy

Author

Xiaohan Liu

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Beihang University

Sonia Yeh

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Patrick Plötz

Fraunhofer Society

Wenxi Ma

Beihang University

Feng Li

Beihang University

Xiaolei Ma

Beihang University

Ministry of Education China

Published in

Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review

1366-5545 (ISSN)

Vol. 187 art. no 103572

Categorizing

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Transport Systems and Logistics

Energy Systems

Identifiers

DOI

10.1016/j.tre.2024.103572

More information

Latest update

3/8/2025 2