Energy arbitrage using second-life electric vehicle battery: A feasibility study based on CU-BEMS data

Journal article


Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes


Publication Details

Author listAree Wangsupphaphol, Sotdhipong Phichaisawat, Awang Jusoh

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2025

Journal acronymASEJ

Volume number16

Issue number11

ISSN2090-4479

eISSN2090-4495

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090447925004812?via%3Dihub

LanguagesEnglish-United States (EN-US)


View on publisher site


Abstract

This study explores energy storage from repurposed EV batteries. For storage sizing, 18 months of actual load profiles from a building energy management system are employed to avoid the shortcomings of a general representative load profile. Ambient temperature is used to evaluate battery performance throughout the project. Our battery degradation models have a higher R-squared than previous studies, making our study unique. Battery deterioration is analyzed using off-peak energy arbitrage and solar energy arbitrage, which use full and half cycles per day and offer different yields. Economic evaluation uses net present value and IRR. The study indi­ cated electricity prices drive return period. The sensitivity analysis shows that off-peak energy arbitrage is not practicable for the 10-year project, but a battery cost of $50 to $60 per kWh and operational temperatures below 35 ◦C would make solar energy arbitrage profitable.


Keywords

battery energy storage systemhybrid energy sourcesRecycled (second-life) Electric Vehicles BatteriesRenewable Energy


Last updated on 2025-01-09 at 12:01