5,016 research outputs found

    An Approximately Optimal Algorithm for Scheduling Phasor Data Transmissions in Smart Grid Networks

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    In this paper, we devise a scheduling algorithm for ordering transmission of synchrophasor data from the substation to the control center in as short a time frame as possible, within the realtime hierarchical communications infrastructure in the electric grid. The problem is cast in the framework of the classic job scheduling with precedence constraints. The optimization setup comprises the number of phasor measurement units (PMUs) to be installed on the grid, a weight associated with each PMU, processing time at the control center for the PMUs, and precedence constraints between the PMUs. The solution to the PMU placement problem yields the optimum number of PMUs to be installed on the grid, while the processing times are picked uniformly at random from a predefined set. The weight associated with each PMU and the precedence constraints are both assumed known. The scheduling problem is provably NP-hard, so we resort to approximation algorithms which provide solutions that are suboptimal yet possessing polynomial time complexity. A lower bound on the optimal schedule is derived using branch and bound techniques, and its performance evaluated using standard IEEE test bus systems. The scheduling policy is power grid-centric, since it takes into account the electrical properties of the network under consideration.Comment: 8 pages, published in IEEE Transactions on Smart Grid, October 201

    A Review on Energy Consumption Optimization Techniques in IoT Based Smart Building Environments

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    In recent years, due to the unnecessary wastage of electrical energy in residential buildings, the requirement of energy optimization and user comfort has gained vital importance. In the literature, various techniques have been proposed addressing the energy optimization problem. The goal of each technique was to maintain a balance between user comfort and energy requirements such that the user can achieve the desired comfort level with the minimum amount of energy consumption. Researchers have addressed the issue with the help of different optimization algorithms and variations in the parameters to reduce energy consumption. To the best of our knowledge, this problem is not solved yet due to its challenging nature. The gap in the literature is due to the advancements in the technology and drawbacks of the optimization algorithms and the introduction of different new optimization algorithms. Further, many newly proposed optimization algorithms which have produced better accuracy on the benchmark instances but have not been applied yet for the optimization of energy consumption in smart homes. In this paper, we have carried out a detailed literature review of the techniques used for the optimization of energy consumption and scheduling in smart homes. The detailed discussion has been carried out on different factors contributing towards thermal comfort, visual comfort, and air quality comfort. We have also reviewed the fog and edge computing techniques used in smart homes

    Enhancing Energy Production with Exascale HPC Methods

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    High Performance Computing (HPC) resources have become the key actor for achieving more ambitious challenges in many disciplines. In this step beyond, an explosion on the available parallelism and the use of special purpose processors are crucial. With such a goal, the HPC4E project applies new exascale HPC techniques to energy industry simulations, customizing them if necessary, and going beyond the state-of-the-art in the required HPC exascale simulations for different energy sources. In this paper, a general overview of these methods is presented as well as some specific preliminary results.The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Programme (2014-2020) under the HPC4E Project (www.hpc4e.eu), grant agreement n° 689772, the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under the CODEC2 project (TIN2015-63562-R), and from the Brazilian Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation through Rede Nacional de Pesquisa (RNP). Computer time on Endeavour cluster is provided by the Intel Corporation, which enabled us to obtain the presented experimental results in uncertainty quantification in seismic imagingPostprint (author's final draft

    Climbing Up Cloud Nine: Performance Enhancement Techniques for Cloud Computing Environments

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    With the transformation of cloud computing technologies from an attractive trend to a business reality, the need is more pressing than ever for efficient cloud service management tools and techniques. As cloud technologies continue to mature, the service model, resource allocation methodologies, energy efficiency models and general service management schemes are not yet saturated. The burden of making this all tick perfectly falls on cloud providers. Surely, economy of scale revenues and leveraging existing infrastructure and giant workforce are there as positives, but it is far from straightforward operation from that point. Performance and service delivery will still depend on the providers’ algorithms and policies which affect all operational areas. With that in mind, this thesis tackles a set of the more critical challenges faced by cloud providers with the purpose of enhancing cloud service performance and saving on providers’ cost. This is done by exploring innovative resource allocation techniques and developing novel tools and methodologies in the context of cloud resource management, power efficiency, high availability and solution evaluation. Optimal and suboptimal solutions to the resource allocation problem in cloud data centers from both the computational and the network sides are proposed. Next, a deep dive into the energy efficiency challenge in cloud data centers is presented. Consolidation-based and non-consolidation-based solutions containing a novel dynamic virtual machine idleness prediction technique are proposed and evaluated. An investigation of the problem of simulating cloud environments follows. Available simulation solutions are comprehensively evaluated and a novel design framework for cloud simulators covering multiple variations of the problem is presented. Moreover, the challenge of evaluating cloud resource management solutions performance in terms of high availability is addressed. An extensive framework is introduced to design high availability-aware cloud simulators and a prominent cloud simulator (GreenCloud) is extended to implement it. Finally, real cloud application scenarios evaluation is demonstrated using the new tool. The primary argument made in this thesis is that the proposed resource allocation and simulation techniques can serve as basis for effective solutions that mitigate performance and cost challenges faced by cloud providers pertaining to resource utilization, energy efficiency, and client satisfaction

    Energy-aware coordination of machine scheduling and support device recharging in production systems

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    Electricity generation from renewable energy sources is crucial for achieving climate targets, including greenhouse gas neutrality. Germany has made significant progress in increasing renewable energy generation. However, feed-in management actions have led to losses of renewable electricity in the past years, primarily from wind energy. These actions aim to maintain grid stability but result in excess renewable energy that goes unused. The lost electricity could have powered a multitude of households and saved CO2 emissions. Moreover, feed-in management actions incurred compensation claims of around 807 million Euros in 2021. Wind-abundant regions like Schleswig-Holstein are particularly affected by these actions, resulting in substantial losses of renewable electricity production. Expanding the power grid infrastructure is a costly and time-consuming solution to avoid feed-in management actions. An alternative approach is to increase local electricity consumption during peak renewable generation periods, which can help balance electricity supply and demand and reduce feed-in management actions. The dissertation focuses on energy-aware manufacturing decision-making, exploring ways to counteract feed-in management actions by increasing local industrial consumption during renewable generation peaks. The research proposes to guide production management decisions, synchronizing a company's energy consumption profile with renewable energy availability for more environmentally friendly production and improved grid stability

    Modeling and Analysis of Scheduling Problems Containing Renewable Energy Decisions

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    With globally increasing energy demands, world citizens are facing one of society\u27s most critical issues: protecting the environment. To reduce the emission of greenhouse gases (GHG), which are by-products of conventional energy resources, people are reducing the consumption of oil, gas, and coal collectively. In the meanwhile, interest in renewable energy resources has grown in recent years. Renewable generators can be installed both on the power grid side and end-use customer side of power systems. Energy management in power systems with multiple microgrids containing renewable energy resources has been a focus of industry and researchers as of late. Further, on-site renewable energy provides great opportunities for manufacturing plants to reduce energy costs when faced with time-varying electricity prices. To efficiently utilize on-site renewable energy generation, production schedules and energy supply decisions need to be coordinated. As renewable energy resources like solar and wind energy typically fluctuate with weather variations, the inherent stochastic nature of renewable energy resources makes the decision making of utilizing renewable generation complex. In this dissertation, we study a power system with one main grid (arbiter) and multiple microgrids (agents). The microgrids (MGs) are equipped to control their local generation and demand in the presence of uncertain renewable generation and heterogeneous energy management settings. We propose an extension to the classical two-stage stochastic programming model to capture these interactions by modeling the arbiter\u27s problem as the first-stage master problem and the agent decision problems as second-stage subproblems. To tackle this problem formulation, we propose a sequential sampling-based optimization algorithm that does not require a priori knowledge of probability distribution functions or selection of samples for renewable generation. The subproblems capture the details of different energy management settings employed at the agent MGs to control heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems; home appliances; industrial production; plug-in electrical vehicles; and storage devices. Computational experiments conducted on the US western interconnect (WECC-240) data set illustrate that the proposed algorithm is scalable and our solutions are statistically verifiable. Our results also show that the proposed framework can be used as a systematic tool to gauge (a) the impact of energy management settings in efficiently utilizing renewable generation and (b) the role of flexible demands in reducing system costs. Next, we present a two-stage, multi-objective stochastic program for flow shops with sequence-dependent setups in order to meet production schedules while managing energy costs. The first stage provides optimal schedules to minimize the total completion time, while the second stage makes energy supply decisions to minimize energy costs under a time-of-use electricity pricing scheme. Power demand for production is met by on-site renewable generation, supply from the main grid, and an energy storage system. An ε-constraint algorithm integrated with an L-shaped method is proposed to analyze the problem. Sets of Pareto optimal solutions are provided for decision-makers and our results show that the energy cost of setup operations is relatively high such that it cannot be ignored. Further, using solar or wind energy can save significant energy costs with solar energy being the more viable option of the two for reducing costs. Finally, we extend the flow shop scheduling problem to a job shop environment under hour-ahead real-time electricity pricing schemes. The objectives of interest are to minimize total weighted completion time and energy costs simultaneously. Besides renewable generation, hour-ahead real-time electricity pricing is another source of uncertainty in this study as electricity prices are released to customers only hours in advance of consumption. A mathematical model is presented and an ε-constraint algorithm is used to tackle the bi-objective problem. Further, to improve computational efficiency and generate solutions in a practically acceptable amount of time, a hybrid multi-objective evolutionary algorithm based on the Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) is developed. Five methods are developed to calculate chromosome fitness values. Computational tests show that both mathematical modeling and our proposed algorithm are comparable, while our algorithm produces solutions much quicker. Using a single method (rather than five) to generate schedules can further reduce computational time without significantly degrading solution quality

    Modeling and Real-Time Scheduling of DC Platform Supply Vessel for Fuel Efficient Operation

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    DC marine architecture integrated with variable speed diesel generators (DGs) has garnered the attention of the researchers primarily because of its ability to deliver fuel efficient operation. This paper aims in modeling and to autonomously perform real-time load scheduling of dc platform supply vessel (PSV) with an objective to minimize specific fuel oil consumption (SFOC) for better fuel efficiency. Focus has been on the modeling of various components and control routines, which are envisaged to be an integral part of dc PSVs. Integration with photovoltaic-based energy storage system (ESS) has been considered as an option to cater for the short time load transients. In this context, this paper proposes a real-time transient simulation scheme, which comprises of optimized generation scheduling of generators and ESS using dc optimal power flow algorithm. This framework considers real dynamics of dc PSV during various marine operations with possible contingency scenarios, such as outage of generation systems, abrupt load changes, and unavailability of ESS. The proposed modeling and control routines with real-time transient simulation scheme have been validated utilizing the real-time marine simulation platform. The results indicate that the coordinated treatment of renewable based ESS with DGs operating with optimized speed yields better fuel savings. This has been observed in improved SFOC operating trajectory for critical marine missions. Furthermore, SFOC minimization at multiple suboptimal points with its treatment in the real-time marine system is also highlighted
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