Electric
vehicles (EVs) can have lower fuel costs and reduce emissions relative to cars that use gasoline, but they are
only a practical option if drivers have convenient ways to charge them. For
people who live in multi-unit dwellings or in urban areas, access to charging
infrastructure may be particularly limited, which in turn limits EV adoption.
To address this issue, a team of
researchers at Penn State created a scalable framework to develop, analyze and
evaluate using streetlights as a low-cost, equitable EV charging option. They
then installed 23 streetlight charging units in Kansas City, Missouri, and
tested their framework.
The researchers found that streetlight
charging stations, compared to traditional EV charging stations, were more
cost- and time-effective, had fewer negative environmental impacts, and were
more convenient and accessible.
Their results were published in the Journal
of Urban Planning and Development, which is overseen by the American
Society of Civil Engineers.
"The motivation for this work comes
from the fact that many apartment and multi-unit dwelling residents,
particularly in urban and downtown areas, lack access to dedicated home EV
chargers, since they don't have the privilege of owning a garage," said
Xianbiao "XB" Hu, associate professor of civil and environmental
engineering.
"Fortunately, streetlight poles are
already powered and typically owned by municipalities, making them relatively
easy to work with. Their placement—often near on-street parking and in
high-traffic areas—makes them well-positioned to serve both local residents and visitors."
The researchers partnered with Kansas
City, the non-profit organization Metro Energy Center, local utilities
companies and the National Renewable Energy Lab to retrofit existing
streetlights to function as EV chargers. They then established a three-pronged
framework—focused on demand, feasibility and benefits—for other communities to
use to develop streetlight EV chargers.
"The scalability was a huge part of
what makes this framework important," said corresponding author Yang
"Chris" Song, who was a doctoral student at Penn State at the time of
the research and is now a data scientist at ElectroTempo. "Creating
something that works not just in one specific city but that can be adopted by
many communities easily is critical for increasing EV use across the
country."
To determine demand, the researchers
looked at factors including land use, station density, points of interest nearby, and traffic
volume and then used the data to train artificial intelligence models to make
demand predictions based on these factors.
"We also took into account equity,
which here means proactive engagement with the community to ensure fair and
inclusive distribution of the streetlight charging benefits across diverse
neighborhoods," Song said.
The researchers used the demand and
equity analyses to select 23 streetlights and installed EV charging stations.
They collected data from the stations for one year.
Compared to traditional EV charging
ports, they found that these stations were much cheaper to install, since the
infrastructure already existed. They also found that the streetlight chargers
offered significantly faster charging speeds, likely because they draw power
from dedicated municipal electrical lines and face less competition from
multiple vehicles charging simultaneously, unlike clustered commercial
stations, according to Yuyan "Annie" Pan, a postdoctoral researcher
working with Hu.
The streetlight charging stations also
benefited the environment, since there were gasoline savings and greenhouse gas
reductions by using locations where cars were already parking.
"We found that using streetlights for EV charging offers an innovative and
equitable approach to expanding charging infrastructure and promoting
sustainable electrification," Pan said.
For next steps, the researchers said they would like to build on their models to incorporate more detailed socioeconomic data and weather information. Incorporating socioeconomic factors will help identify communities with limited EV access or adoption potential, ensuring more equitable infrastructure deployment. Weather data is also critical, as extreme temperatures can affect battery performance, travel frequency and overall energy demand.
Source: Lighting the way for electric vehicles by using streetlamps as chargers
No comments:
Post a Comment