156 research outputs found

    Two-Stage Consensus-Based Distributed MPC for Interconnected Microgrids

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    In this paper, we propose a model predictive control based two-stage energy management system that aims at increasing the renewable infeed in interconnected microgrids (MGs). In particular, the proposed approach ensures that each MG in the network benefits from power exchange. In the first stage, the optimal islanded operational cost of each MG is obtained. In the second stage, the power exchange is determined such that the operational cost of each MG is below the optimal islanded cost from the first stage. In this stage, a distributed augmented Lagrangian method is used to solve the optimisation problem and determine the power flow of the network without requiring a central entity. This algorithm has faster convergence and same information exchange at each iteration as the dual decomposition algorithm. The properties of the algorithm are illustrated in a numerical case study

    A Review of Energy Management of Renewable Multisources in Industrial Microgrids

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    This review aims to consolidate recent advancements in power control within microgrids and multi-microgrids. It specifically focuses on analyzing the comparative benefits of various architectures concerning energy sharing and demand cost management. The paper provides a comprehensive technical analysis of different architectures found in existing literature, which are designed for energy management and demand cost optimization. In summary, this review paper provides a thorough examination of power control in microgrids and multi-microgrids and compares different architectural approaches for energy management and demand cost optimization

    A multi-agent privacy-preserving energy management framework for renewable networked microgrids

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    This paper proposes a fully distributed scheme to solve the day-ahead optimal power scheduling of networked microgrids in the presence of different renewable energy resources, such as photovoltaics and wind turbines, considering energy storage systems. The proposed method enables the optimization of the power scheduling problem through local computation of agents in the system and private communication between existing agents, without any centralized scheduling unit. In this paper, a cloud-fog-based framework is also introduced as a fast and economical infrastructure for the proposed distributed method. The suggested optimized energy framework proposes an area to regulate and update policies, detect misbehaving elements, and execute punishments centrally, while the general power scheduling problem is optimized in a distributed manner using the proposed method. The suggested cloud-fog-based method eliminates the need to invest in local databases and computing systems. The proposed scheme is examined on a small-scale microgrid and also a larger test networked microgrid, including 4 microgrids and 15 areas in a 24-h time period, to illustrate the scalability, convergence, and accuracy of the framework. The simulation results substantiate the fast and precise performance of the proposed framework for networked microgrids compared with other existing centralized and distributed methods.© 2023 The Authors. IET Generation, Transmission & Distribution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Institution of Engineering and Technology. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.fi=vertaisarvioitu|en=peerReviewed

    Optimal Decentralized Coordination of Sources in Islanded and Grid-connected Microgrids

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    Rising climate change concerns in recent years have instigated the emergence of sustainable sources to reduce dependence on high-emission, isolated bulk generation systems. The microgrid framework relies on integrating these distributed energy resources (DERs) to achieve regional energy independence that leads to a reliable and environment-friendly power grid. In this work, highly granular and decentralized coordination schemes are proposed that will enable fast computation of source dispatch set-points, thereby appropriately accounting for frequent changes in regional load-supply configuration of a microgrid. The mathematical models utilized in the study sufficiently represent the steady-state electrical interdependencies and feasibility limits in islanded or grid-connected operation modes. Applying alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) algorithm, the coordination process is transformed into a decentralized multi-agent problem involving minimal information exchange between subsystems. To overcome non-convexities typically present in optimization problem of microgrids, the two distinct convex relaxation techniques utilized are: 1) Linearization and 2) S-procedure. In separate coordination schemes, the former lends the advantage of extremely fast computation speed, while the latter exploits the hidden convexity in the decomposed coordination problem to deliver solutions with superior feasibility guarantee. Finally, the convergence, feasibility and scalability of the proposed coordination techniques are assessed with simulation studies performed on realistic microgrid parameters and several IEEE test systems

    Distributed Control Strategies for Microgrids: An Overview

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    There is an increasing interest and research effort focused on the analysis, design and implementation of distributed control systems for AC, DC and hybrid AC/DC microgrids. It is claimed that distributed controllers have several advantages over centralised control schemes, e.g., improved reliability, flexibility, controllability, black start operation, robustness to failure in the communication links, etc. In this work, an overview of the state-of-the-art of distributed cooperative control systems for isolated microgrids is presented. Protocols for cooperative control such as linear consensus, heterogeneous consensus and finite-time consensus are discussed and reviewed in this paper. Distributed cooperative algorithms for primary and secondary control systems, including (among others issues) virtual impedance, synthetic inertia, droop-free control, stability analysis, imbalance sharing, total harmonic distortion regulation, are also reviewed and discussed in this survey. Tertiary control systems, e.g., for economic dispatch of electric energy, based on cooperative control approaches, are also addressed in this work. This review also highlights existing issues, research challenges and future trends in distributed cooperative control of microgrids and their future applications
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