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Autores principales: Zhao, Boshuai, Abdin, Adam, Puchinger, Jakob
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03282
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author Zhao, Boshuai
Abdin, Adam
Puchinger, Jakob
author_facet Zhao, Boshuai
Abdin, Adam
Puchinger, Jakob
contents The Electric Autonomous Dial-a-Ride Problem (E-ADARP) involves routing and scheduling electric autonomous vehicles under battery capacity and partial recharging constraints, aiming to minimize total travel cost and excess ride time. In practice, operational data for time and state-of-charge (SoC) are often available only at a coarse granularity. This raises a natural question: can discretization be exploited to improve computational performance by enabling alternative formulation structures? To investigate this question, we develop three formulations reflecting different levels of discretization. The first is an improved event-based formulation (IEBF) with arc-flow SoC variables for the continuous-parameter E-ADARP, serving as a strengthened baseline. The latter two are fragment-based formulations designed for discretized inputs. The second is a time-space fragment-based formulation with continuous SoC arc-flow variables (TSFFCS), which discretizes time while keeping SoC continuous. The third is a battery-time-space fragment-based formulation (BTSFF), which discretizes both time and SoC. Here, an event denotes a tuple consisting of a location and a set of onboard customers, while a fragment denotes a partial path. Computational results show that IEBF improves upon the existing event-based formulation for the original E-ADARP. Under discretized settings, TSFFCS tends to outperform IEBF, particularly when recharging is frequent and time discretization is relatively coarse, indicating that time discretization can improve computational performance across a wide range of settings. In contrast, BTSFF rarely outperforms TSFFCS unless the number of reachable SoC levels is limited, suggesting that explicit SoC discretization is beneficial only in relatively restricted settings.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle New Formulations and Discretization Insights for the Electric Autonomous Dial-a-Ride Problem
Zhao, Boshuai
Abdin, Adam
Puchinger, Jakob
Systems and Control
The Electric Autonomous Dial-a-Ride Problem (E-ADARP) involves routing and scheduling electric autonomous vehicles under battery capacity and partial recharging constraints, aiming to minimize total travel cost and excess ride time. In practice, operational data for time and state-of-charge (SoC) are often available only at a coarse granularity. This raises a natural question: can discretization be exploited to improve computational performance by enabling alternative formulation structures? To investigate this question, we develop three formulations reflecting different levels of discretization. The first is an improved event-based formulation (IEBF) with arc-flow SoC variables for the continuous-parameter E-ADARP, serving as a strengthened baseline. The latter two are fragment-based formulations designed for discretized inputs. The second is a time-space fragment-based formulation with continuous SoC arc-flow variables (TSFFCS), which discretizes time while keeping SoC continuous. The third is a battery-time-space fragment-based formulation (BTSFF), which discretizes both time and SoC. Here, an event denotes a tuple consisting of a location and a set of onboard customers, while a fragment denotes a partial path. Computational results show that IEBF improves upon the existing event-based formulation for the original E-ADARP. Under discretized settings, TSFFCS tends to outperform IEBF, particularly when recharging is frequent and time discretization is relatively coarse, indicating that time discretization can improve computational performance across a wide range of settings. In contrast, BTSFF rarely outperforms TSFFCS unless the number of reachable SoC levels is limited, suggesting that explicit SoC discretization is beneficial only in relatively restricted settings.
title New Formulations and Discretization Insights for the Electric Autonomous Dial-a-Ride Problem
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03282