2,277 research outputs found

    Enabling Privacy in a Distributed Game-Theoretical Scheduling System for Domestic Appliances

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    Demand side management (DSM) makes it possible to adjust the load experienced by the power grid while reducing the consumers' bill. Game-theoretic DSM is an appealing decentralized approach for collaboratively scheduling the usage of domestic electrical appliances within a set of households while meeting the users' preferences about the usage time. The drawback of distributed DSM protocols is that they require each user to communicate his/her own energy consumption patterns, which may leak sensitive information regarding private habits. This paper proposes a distributed privacy-friendly DSM system that preserves users' privacy by integrating data aggregation and perturbation techniques: users decide their schedule according to aggregated consumption measurements perturbed by means of additive white Gaussian noise. We evaluate the noise power and the number of users required to achieve a given privacy level, quantified by means of the increase of the information entropy of the aggregated energy consumption pattern. The performance of our proposed DSM system is compared to the one of a benchmark system that does not support privacy preservation in terms of total bill, peak demand, and convergence time. Results show that privacy can be improved at the cost of increasing the peak demand and the number of game iterations, whereas the total bill is only marginally incremented

    Residential Demand Side Management model, optimization and future perspective: A review

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    The residential load sector plays a vital role in terms of its impact on overall power balance, stability, and efficient power management. However, the load dynamics of the energy demand of residential users are always nonlinear, uncontrollable, and inelastic concerning power grid regulation and management. The integration of distributed generations (DGs) and advancement of information and communication technology (ICT) even though handles the related issues and challenges up to some extent, till the flexibility, energy management and scheduling with better planning are necessary for the residential sector to achieve better grid stability and efficiency. To address these issues, it is indispensable to analyze the demand-side management (DSM) for the complex residential sector considering various operational constraints, objectives, identifying various factors that affect better planning, scheduling, and management, to project the key features of various approaches and possible future research directions. This review has been done based on the related literature to focus on modeling, optimization methods, major objectives, system operation constraints, dominating factors impacting overall system operation, and possible solutions enhancing residential DSM operation. Gaps in future research and possible prospects have been discussed briefly to give a proper insight into the current implementation of DSM. This extensive review of residential DSM will help all the researchers in this area to innovate better energy management strategies and reduce the effect of system uncertainties, variations, and constraints

    Game Theory Based Privacy Protection for Context-Aware Services

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    In the era of context-aware services, users are enjoying remarkable services based on data collected from a multitude of users. To receive services, they are at risk of leaking private information from adversaries possibly eavesdropping on the data and/or the un--trusted service platform selling off its data. Malicious adversaries may use leaked information to violate users\u27 privacy in unpredictable ways. To protect users\u27 privacy, many algorithms are proposed to protect users\u27 sensitive information by adding noise, thus causing context-aware service quality loss. Game theory has been utilized as a powerful tool to balance the tradeoff between privacy protection level and service quality. However, most of the existing schemes fail to depict the mutual relationship between any two parties involved: user, platform, and adversary. There is also an oversight to formulate the interaction occurring between multiple users, as well as the interaction between any two attributes. To solve these issues, this dissertation firstly proposes a three-party game framework to formulate the mutual interaction between three parties and study the optimal privacy protection level for context-aware services, thus optimize the service quality. Next, this dissertation extends the framework to a multi-user scenario and proposes a two-layer three-party game framework. This makes the proposed framework more realistic by further exploring the interaction, not only between different parties, but also between users. Finally, we focus on analyzing the impact of long-term time-serial data and the active actions of the platform and adversary. To achieve this objective, we design a three-party Stackelberg game model to help the user to decide whether to update information and the granularity of updated information

    Smart Energy Management for Smart Grids

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    This book is a contribution from the authors, to share solutions for a better and sustainable power grid. Renewable energy, smart grid security and smart energy management are the main topics discussed in this book

    An Energy Management Service for the Smart Office

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    The evolution of the electricity grid towards the smart grid paradigm is fostering the integration of distributed renewable energy sources in smart buildings: a combination of local power generation, battery storage and controllable loads can greatly increase the energetic self-sufficiency of a smart building, enabling it to maximize the self-consumption of photovoltaic electricity and to participate in the energy market, thus taking advantage of time-variable tariffs to achieve economic savings. This paper proposes an energy management infrastructure specifically tailored for a smart office building, which relies on measured data and on forecasting algorithms to predict the future patterns of both local energy generation and power loads. The performance is compared to the optimal energy usage scheduling, which would be obtained assuming the exact knowledge of the future energy production and consumption trends, showing gaps below 10% with respect to the optimum

    Intelligent Decision Support System for Energy Management in Demand Response Programs and Residential and Industrial Sectors of the Smart Grid

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    This PhD thesis addresses the complexity of the energy efficiency control problem in residential and industrial customers of Smart electrical Grid, and examines the main factors that affect energy demand, and proposes an intelligent decision support system for applications of demand response. A multi criteria decision making algorithm is combined with a combinatorial optimization technique to assist energy managers to decide whether to participate in demand response programs or obtain energy from distributed energy resources

    A novel real-time electricity scheduling for home energy management system using the internet of energy

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    This paper presents a novel scheduling scheme for the real-time home energy management systems based on Internet of Energy (IoE). The scheme is a multi-agent method that considers two chief purposes including user satisfaction and energy consumption cost. The scheme is designed under environment of microgrid. The user impact in terms of energy cost savings is generally significant in terms of system efficiency. That is why domestic users are involved in the management of domestic appliances. The optimization algorithms are based on an improved version of the rainfall algorithm and the salp swarm algorithm. In this paper, the Time of Use (ToU) model is proposed to define the rates for shoulder-peak and on-peak hours. A two-level communication system connects the microgrid system, implemented in MATLAB, to the cloud server. The local communication level utilizes IP/TCP and MQTT and is used as a protocol for the global communication level. The scheduling controller proposed in this study succeeded the energy saving of 25.3% by using the salp swarm algorithm and saving of 31.335% by using the rainfall algorithm

    Urban load optimization based on agent-based model representation

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    Tese de mestrado integrado em Engenharia da Energia e do Ambiente, apresentada à Universidade de Lisboa, através da Faculdade de Ciências, em 2018O sistema energético atravessará uma profunda transformação nos próximos anos à medida que a produção renovável distribuída, a flexibilidade no lado do consumo e as funcionalidades de SmartGrid são implementadas. Este processo, conduzido em grande parte pelas imposições causadas pelos efeitos das alterações climáticas, implica profundas transformações na produção e consumo de energia e torna a transição energética extremamente urgente. Simultaneamente, novos players, entidades e modelos de negócio têm emergido em quase todos os níveis da cadeia energética desde a produção, a transmissão, distribuição e comercialização até à gestão da rede elétrica, num movimento conduzido pelo processo de particionamento (unbundling) do sistema elétrico e pela exigência de um sistema mais descentralizado e horizontal. O efeito combinado desta nova paisagem energética torna possíveis novas funcionalidades e arquitecturas de sistema na mesma medida em que coloca enormes problemas de natureza física e matemática mas também enormes questões económicas, sociais e políticas que terão, necessariamente, de ser abordadas e resolvidas. A Gestão do Consumo é um termo abrangente que representa tanto os mecanismos de Resposta na Procura (Demand Response) ou a Gestão no Lado da Procura (Demand-Side Management) e que se impõe como um dos problemas actuais mais importantes em sistemas energéticos inteligentes caracterizados por altas penetrações renováveis e mecanismos de mercado. Para resolver estes problemas, um conjunto de métodos matemáticos e computacionais têm sido propostos nos últimos anos. Otimização distribuída e sistemas inteligentes, sistemas baseados em agentes de software e teoria de jogos encontram-se entre algumas das ferramentas usadas para otimizar o consumo de energia e determinar o agendamento e a alocação ótima de equipamentos e máquinas para consumidores residenciais, comerciais e industriais. Na sequência de trabalhos prévios disponíveis na literatura da especialidade, o presente trabalho propõe um modelo geral para abordar o problema da otimização de cargas através de arquitecturas e métodos baseados no paradigma dos Agentes. O trabalho começa por definir agentes em pontos críticos da rede elétrica e os seus processos internos de raciocínio representados por modelos de otimização matemática. Seguidamente as interações entre agentes são modeladas como um jogo de dois níveis (bi-level game) entre uma entidade gestora da rede e consumidores de energia tipificados de forma a coordenar o carregamento de diversos equipamentos, incluindo veículos elétricos, e determinar uma solução admissível para o sistema global. A funcionalidade geral do modelo proposto é demonstrada através da sua implementação em software proprietário e recorrendo a um conjunto de dados específicos. Está, então, pronto para ser complementado e refinado no futuro de forma a ser aplicado em problemas do mundo real, de grandes dimensões, mas também novas implementações em software open source de forma a ficar acessível a novos utilizadores.The energy system is expected to go through a phase change in coming years as distributed generation, demand flexibility and SmartGrid features gets implemented. The main driver for this process, climate change, imposes constraints on energy production and consumption making energy transition extremely urgent. Simultaneously, new players, entities and business models have emerged at almost all levels of the energy chain from production, transmission, distribution and commercialization down to power grid management driven by the unbundling process and the call for a more decentralized and horizontal energy system. The combined effect of this new energy landscape makes new system’s architectures and functionalities desirable and possible, but poses huge physical, mathematical, engineering, economic and political questions and problems that need to be tackled. Load Management is one broad term depicting Demand-Side Management and Demand Response mechanisms and is one of the pressing problems on smart energy systems. To solve them, a plethora of computational and mathematical methods have been proposed in recent years. Distributed optimization and intelligence, software agents, agent-based systems and game theory are among the tools used to optimize load consumption and determine optimal device scheduling for residential, commercial and industrial power consumers Following previous work found in literature, the present work proposes a general framework to treat the load optimization problem using agent-based architectures and models. We start by defining agents at critical points within the power grid as well as their internal reasoning process depicted by mathematical optimization models. We then proceed to model the cooperative interactions between agents as a Bi-level game between a grid entity and typified power consumers in order to coordinate the charging of several appliances and electrical vehicles and determine a feasible solution for the global system. We show the general functionality of the framework by implementing it in software and applying it to specific datasets. The framework is suitable for further refinement and development when applied to real world problems
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