2018
DOI: 10.1111/mice.12379
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Multitype Recharge Facility Location for Electric Vehicles

Abstract: The motivation of this study is to minimize the system-level travel time costs and greenhouse emissions, which include tailpipe emissions by internal combustion engine vehicles (ICEVs) and smokestack emissions indirectly caused by electric vehicles (EVs), while satisfying EVs' replenishment need in transport networks subject to financial restraints for infrastructure development. In this study, we address recharge facility locations of EVs, where two types of recharge services are taken into account, that is, … Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 99 publications
(117 reference statements)
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“…TEPs can also provide valuable information to local and regional climate change mitigation initiatives whose success relies on the ability to assess city-scale traffic-related GHG emissions. The model also includes the capability for updating the emission inventory to include new vehicle technologies (Pradenas, Oportus, & Parada, 2013;Zhang, Rey, & Waller, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TEPs can also provide valuable information to local and regional climate change mitigation initiatives whose success relies on the ability to assess city-scale traffic-related GHG emissions. The model also includes the capability for updating the emission inventory to include new vehicle technologies (Pradenas, Oportus, & Parada, 2013;Zhang, Rey, & Waller, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditional studies attempted to determine the optimal serving facility locations to capture maximum customer flow as well as to minimize the number of facilities required to cover a given flow (Berman et al, 1992;Hodgson, 1990). For more information on location design problems see: (Daskin, 1996;Owen and Daskin, 1998;Snyder, 2006;Ouyang et al, 2009;Wang and Ouyang, 2013;Jung et al, 2016;Zhang, Rey et al, 2018;Wang et al, 2019). Some other studies provided joint design problems that simultaneously consider facility location problem with other network elements (Melkote and Daskin, 2001;Shen et al, 2003;Yao et al, 2010).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the review conducted by Zhu, Fu, and Ma (), studies on network sensor location can be categorized into studies on flow‐observability‐oriented sensor location, studies on flow‐estimation‐oriented sensor location, and those on travel‐time‐estimation‐oriented sensor location. Here, the network sensor location problem belongs to the facility location problem, such as the location problem of freight facility (Hajibabai, Bai, & Ouyang, ; Xie & Ouyang, ), railroad wayside defect detection (Ouyang, Li, Barkan, Kawprasert, & Lai, ), and recharge facility for electric vehicles (Zhang, Rey, & Waller, ), in operations research area. The flow‐observability‐oriented sensor location aims to determine how many sensors are needed as well as where they should be located for the unique determination of the unobserved link flows.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%