Locating battery charging stations to facilitate almost shortest paths

We study a facility location problem motivated by requirements pertaining to the distribution of charging stations for electric vehicles: Place a minimum number of battery charging stations at a subset of nodes of a network, so that battery-powered electric vehicles will be able to move between dest...

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Published inDiscrete Applied Mathematics Vol. 254; pp. 10 - 16
Main Authors Arkin, Esther M., Carmi, Paz, Katz, Matthew J., Mitchell, Joseph S.B., Segal, Michael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 15.02.2019
Elsevier BV
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ISSN0166-218X
1872-6771
DOI10.1016/j.dam.2018.07.019

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Summary:We study a facility location problem motivated by requirements pertaining to the distribution of charging stations for electric vehicles: Place a minimum number of battery charging stations at a subset of nodes of a network, so that battery-powered electric vehicles will be able to move between destinations using “t-spanning” routes, of lengths within a factor t>1 of the length of a shortest path, while having sufficient charging stations along the way. We give constant-factor approximation algorithms for minimizing the number of charging stations, subject to the t-spanning constraint. We study two versions of the problem, one in which the stations are required to support a single ride (to a single destination), and one in which the stations are to support multiple rides through a sequence of destinations, where the destinations are revealed one at a time.
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ISSN:0166-218X
1872-6771
DOI:10.1016/j.dam.2018.07.019