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Main Authors: Kuvvetli, Ipek, Sundström, Christofer, Kharrazi, Sogol, Frisk, Erik
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.20067
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author Kuvvetli, Ipek
Sundström, Christofer
Kharrazi, Sogol
Frisk, Erik
author_facet Kuvvetli, Ipek
Sundström, Christofer
Kharrazi, Sogol
Frisk, Erik
contents This paper presents a comparative optimization framework for smart charging of electrified vehicle fleets. Using heuristic sequential dynamic programming (SeqDP), the framework minimizes electricity costs while adhering to constraints related to the power grid, charging infrastructure, vehicle availability, and simple considerations of battery aging. Based on real-world operational data, the model incorporates discrete energy states, time-varying tariffs, and state-of-charge (SoC) targets to deliver a scalable and cost-effective solution. Classical DP approach suffers from exponential computational complexity as the problem size increases. This becomes particularly problematic when conducting monthly-scale analyses aimed at minimizing peak power demand across all vehicles. The extended time horizon, coupled with multi-state decision-making, renders exact optimization impractical at larger scales. To address this, a heuristic method is employed to enable systematic aggregation and tractable computation for the Non-Linear Programming (NLP) problem. Rather than seeking a globally optimal solution, this study focuses on a time-efficient smart charging strategy that aims to minimize energy cost while flattening the overall power profile. In this context, a sequential heuristic DP approach is proposed. Its performance is evaluated against a full-fleet solver using Gurobi, a widely used commercial solver in both academia and industry. The proposed algorithm achieves a reduction of the overall cost and peak power by more than 90% compared to uncontrolled schedules. Its relative cost remains within 9\% of the optimal values obtained from the full-fleet solver, and its relative peak-power deviation stays below 15% for larger fleets.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_20067
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Grid-Constrained Smart Charging of Large EV Fleets: Comparative Study of Sequential DP and a Full Fleet Solver
Kuvvetli, Ipek
Sundström, Christofer
Kharrazi, Sogol
Frisk, Erik
Systems and Control
This paper presents a comparative optimization framework for smart charging of electrified vehicle fleets. Using heuristic sequential dynamic programming (SeqDP), the framework minimizes electricity costs while adhering to constraints related to the power grid, charging infrastructure, vehicle availability, and simple considerations of battery aging. Based on real-world operational data, the model incorporates discrete energy states, time-varying tariffs, and state-of-charge (SoC) targets to deliver a scalable and cost-effective solution. Classical DP approach suffers from exponential computational complexity as the problem size increases. This becomes particularly problematic when conducting monthly-scale analyses aimed at minimizing peak power demand across all vehicles. The extended time horizon, coupled with multi-state decision-making, renders exact optimization impractical at larger scales. To address this, a heuristic method is employed to enable systematic aggregation and tractable computation for the Non-Linear Programming (NLP) problem. Rather than seeking a globally optimal solution, this study focuses on a time-efficient smart charging strategy that aims to minimize energy cost while flattening the overall power profile. In this context, a sequential heuristic DP approach is proposed. Its performance is evaluated against a full-fleet solver using Gurobi, a widely used commercial solver in both academia and industry. The proposed algorithm achieves a reduction of the overall cost and peak power by more than 90% compared to uncontrolled schedules. Its relative cost remains within 9\% of the optimal values obtained from the full-fleet solver, and its relative peak-power deviation stays below 15% for larger fleets.
title Grid-Constrained Smart Charging of Large EV Fleets: Comparative Study of Sequential DP and a Full Fleet Solver
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.20067