ChargeX: Exploring State Switching Attack on Electric Vehicle Charging Systems
Ce Zhou (1), Qiben Yan (1), Zhiyuan Yu (2), Eshan Dixit (1), Ning, Zhang (2), Huacheng Zeng (1), and Alireza Safdari Ghanhdari (3) ((1) Michigan, State University, (2) Washington University in St. Louis, (3) Texas A&M, University )

TL;DR
This paper uncovers security vulnerabilities in EV charging protocols, introduces ChargeX attacks that manipulate charging states, and demonstrates their effectiveness on real chargers and a Tesla Model 3, highlighting potential risks to EV infrastructure.
Contribution
It reveals the lack of authentication in SAE J1772 protocol and proposes a hardware-based attack method, ChargeX, to manipulate EV charging processes.
Findings
ChargeX can switch EV charging states maliciously.
Effective attack demonstrated on public and home chargers.
Disrupts charging schedules and vehicle charging behavior.
Abstract
Electric Vehicle (EV) has become one of the promising solutions to the ever-evolving environmental and energy crisis. The key to the wide adoption of EVs is a pervasive charging infrastructure, composed of both private/home chargers and public/commercial charging stations. The security of EV charging, however, has not been thoroughly investigated. This paper investigates the communication mechanisms between the chargers and EVs, and exposes the lack of protection on the authenticity in the SAE J1772 charging control protocol. To showcase our discoveries, we propose a new class of attacks, ChargeX, which aims to manipulate the charging states or charging rates of EV chargers with the goal of disrupting the charging schedules, causing a denial of service (DoS), or degrading the battery performance. ChargeX inserts a hardware attack circuit to strategically modify the charging control…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks · Advanced Battery Technologies Research · Recycling and Waste Management Techniques
