25 research outputs found

    A review of architectures and concepts for intelligence in future electric energy system

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    Renewable energy sources are one key enabler to decrease greenhouse gas emissions and to cope with the anthropogenic climate change. Their intermittent behavior and limited storage capabilities present a new challenge to power system operators to maintain power quality and reliability. Additional technical complexity arises from the large number of small distributed generation units and their allocation within the power system. Market liberalization and changing regulatory framework lead to additional organizational complexity. As a result, the design and operation of the future electric energy system have to be redefined. Sophisticated information and communication architectures, automation concepts, and control approaches are necessary in order to manage the higher complexity of so-called smart grids. This paper provides an overview of the state of the art and recent developments enabling higher intelligence in future smart grids. The integration of renewable sources and storage systems into the power grids is analyzed. Energy management and demand response methods and important automation paradigms and domain standards are also reviewed.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Towards Improving Resilience of Smart Urban Electricity Networks by Interactively Assessing Potential Microgrids

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    When a city adds a renewable generation to improve its carbon footprint, this step towards a greener city can be a step towards a smarter city. Strategical positioning of new urban electricity components makes the city more resilient to electricity outages. Money and resilience are two conflicting goals in this case. In case of blackouts, renewable generation, other than distributed combustion generations, can serve critical demand to essential city nodes, such as hospitals, water purification facilities, and police stations. Not the last, the city level stakeholders might be interested in envisioning monetary saving related to introducing a renewable. To provide decision makers with resilience and monetary information, it is needed to analyze the impact of introducing the renewable into the grid. This paper introduces a novel tool suitable for this purpose and reports on the validation efforts. The outcomes indicate that predicted outcomes of two alternative points of introducing renewables into the grid can be analyzed with the help of the tool and ultimately be meaningfully compared

    Solar irradiance forecast from all-sky images using machine learning

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    The novel method presented here comprises techniques for cloud coverage percentage forecasts, cloud movement forecast and the subsequently prediction of the global horizontal irradiance (GHI) using all-sky images and Machine Learning techniques. Such models are employed to forecast GHI, which is necessary to make more accurate time series forecasts for photovoltaic systems like “island solutions” for power production or for energy exchange like in virtual power plants. All images were recorded by a hemispheric sky imager (HSI) at the Institute of Meteo rology and Climatology (IMuK) of the Leibniz University Hannover, Hannover, Germany. This thesis is composed of three parts. First, a model to forecast the total cloud cover five-minutes ahead by training an autoregressive neural network with Backpropagation. The prediction results showed a reduction of both the Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) and Mean Absolute Error (MAE) by approximately 30% compared to the reference solar persistence solar model for various cloud conditions. Second, a model to predict the GHI up to one-hour ahead by training a Levenberg Marquardt Backpropagation neural network. This novel method reduced both the RMSE and the MAE of the one-hour prediction by approximately 40% under various weather conditions. Third, for the forecasting of the cloud movement up to two-minutes ahead, a high-resolution Deep Learning method using convolutional neural networks (CNN) was created. By taking real cloud shapes produced by the correction of the hazy areas considering the green signal counts pixels, predicted clouds shapes of the proposed algorithm was compared with the persistence solar model using the SĂžrensen-Dice similarity coefficient (SDC). The results of the proposed method have shown a mean SDC of 94 ± 2.6% (mean ± standard deviation) for the first minutes outperforming the persistence solar model with a SDC of 89 ± 3.8%. Thus, the proposed method may represent cloud shapes better than the persistence solar model. Finally, the Bonferroni's correction was performed so that the significance level of 0.05 was corrected to 0.05, and thus, the difference between the SDC of the proposed method and the persistence solar model was p = 0.001 being significantly high. The proposed methodologies may have broad application in the planning and management of PV power production allowing more accurate forecasts of the GHI minutes ahead by targeting primary and secondary energy control reserve

    Generic architectures for open, multi-objective autonomic systems:application to smart micro-grids

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    Autonomic features, i.e. the capability of systems to manage themselves, are necessary to control complex systems, i.e. systems that are open, large scale, dynamic, comprise heterogeneous third-party sub-systems and follow multiple, sometimes conflicting objectives. In this thesis, we aim to provide generic reusable supports for designing complex autonomic systems. We propose a formalisation of management objectives, a generic architecture for designing adaptable multi-objective autonomic systems, and generic organisations integrating such autonomic systems. We apply our approach to the concrete case of smart micro-grids which is a relevant example of such complexity. We present a simulation platform we developped and illustrate our approach via several simulation scenarios

    Adaptive facade network — Europe

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    Energy efficient buildings significantly contribute to meeting the EU climate and energy sustainability targets for 2020 as approximately one-third of all end-user energy in Europe today is consumed by space heating/cooling, ventilation and lighting of buildings. In this context, the energy performance of future building envelopes will play a key role.  The main aim of COST Action TU1403 with 120 participants from 26 European countries is to harmonise, share and disseminate technological knowledge on adaptive facades on a European level and to generate ideas for new innovative technologies and solutions

    Machine learning techniques to forecast non-linear trends in smart environments

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    L'abstract Ăš presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen

    Telekomunikacja i Techniki Informacyjne, 2011, nr 3-4

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    Demand Response in Smart Grids

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    The Special Issue “Demand Response in Smart Grids” includes 11 papers on a variety of topics. The success of this Special Issue demonstrates the relevance of demand response programs and events in the operation of power and energy systems at both the distribution level and at the wide power system level. This reprint addresses the design, implementation, and operation of demand response programs, with focus on methods and techniques to achieve an optimized operation as well as on the electricity consumer

    Educational Technology and Related Education Conferences for June to December 2015

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    The 33rd edition of the conference list covers selected events that primarily focus on the use of technology in educational settings and on teaching, learning, and educational administration. Only listings until December 2015 are complete as dates, locations, or Internet addresses (URLs) were not available for a number of events held from January 2016 onward. In order to protect the privacy of individuals, only URLs are used in the listing as this enables readers of the list to obtain event information without submitting their e-mail addresses to anyone. A significant challenge during the assembly of this list is incomplete or conflicting information on websites and the lack of a link between conference websites from one year to the next
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