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Creators/Authors contains: "Jamil, Umar"

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  1. Electric vehicles (EVs) play a crucial role in achieving sustainability goals, mitigating energy crises, and reducing air pollution. However, their rapid adoption poses significant challenges to the power grid, particularly during peak charging periods, necessitating advanced load management strategies. This study introduces an artificial intelligence (AI)-integrated optimal charging framework designed to facilitate fast charging and mitigate grid stress by smoothing the “duck curve”. Data from Caltech’s Adaptive Charging Network (ACN) at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) site was collected and categorized into day and night patterns to predict charging duration based on key features, including start charging time and energy requested. The AI-driven charging strategy developed optimizes energy management, reduces peak loads, and alleviates grid strain. Additionally, the study evaluates the impact of integrating 1.5 million, 3 million, and 5 million EVs under various AI-based charging strategies, demonstrating the framework’s effectiveness in managing large-scale EV adoption. The peak power consumption reaches around 22,000 MW without EVs, 25,000 MW for 1.5 million EVs, 28,000 MW for 3 million EVs, and 35,000 MW for 5 million EVs without any charging strategy. By implementing an AI-driven optimal charging optimization strategy that considers both early charging and duck curve smoothing, the peak demand is reduced by approximately 16% for 1.5 million EVs, 21.43% for 3 million EVs, and 34.29% for 5 million EVs. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  2. Eco-driving has garnered considerable research attention owing to its potential socio-economic impact, including enhanced public health and mitigated climate change effects through the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. With an expectation of more autonomous vehicles (AVs) on the road, an eco-driving strategy in hybrid traffic networks encompassing AV and human-driven vehicles (HDVs) with the coordination of traffic lights is a challenging task. The challenge is partially due to the insufficient infrastructure for collecting, transmitting, and sharing real-time traffic data among vehicles, facilities, and traffic control centers, and the following decision-making of agents involved in traffic control. Additionally, the intricate nature of the existing traffic network, with its diverse array of vehicles and facilities, contributes to the challenge by hindering the development of a mathematical model for accurately characterizing the traffic network. In this study, we utilized the Simulation of Urban Mobility (SUMO) simulator to tackle the first challenge through computational analysis. To address the second challenge, we employed a model-free reinforcement learning (RL) algorithm, proximal policy optimization, to decide the actions of AV and traffic light signals in a traffic network. A novel eco-driving strategy was proposed by introducing different percentages of AV into the traffic flow and collaborating with traffic light signals using RL to control the overall speed of the vehicles, resulting in improved fuel consumption efficiency. Average rewards with different penetration rates of AV (5%, 10%, and 20% of total vehicles) were compared to the situation without any AV in the traffic flow (0% penetration rate). The 10% penetration rate of AV showed a minimum time of convergence to achieve average reward, leading to a significant reduction in fuel consumption and total delay of all vehicles. 
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