5,773 research outputs found

    Leveraging Two-Stage Adaptive Robust Optimization for Power Flexibility Aggregation

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    To effectively harness the significant flexibility from massive distributed energy resources (DERs) for transmission-distribution interaction, power flexibility aggregation is performed for a distribution system to compute the feasible region of the exchanged power at the substation. Based on the adaptive robust optimization (ARO) framework, this paper proposes a novel methodology for aggregating system-level power flexibility, considering heterogeneous DER facilities, network operational constraints, and unbalanced power flow model. In particular, two power flexibility aggregation models with two-stage optimization are developed for application: one focuses on aggregating active power and computes its optimal feasible intervals over multiple periods, while the other solves the optimal elliptical feasible regions for the aggregate active-reactive power. By leveraging ARO technique, the disaggregation feasibility of the obtained feasible regions is guaranteed with optimality. The numerical simulations conducted on a real-world distribution feeder with 126 multi-phase nodes demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.Comment: 8 Page

    Data science for buildings, a multi-scale approach bridging occupants to smart-city energy planning

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    Data science for buildings, a multi-scale approach bridging occupants to smart-city energy planning

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    In a context of global carbon emission reduction goals, buildings have been identified to detain valuable energy-saving abilities. With the exponential increase of smart, connected building automation systems, massive amounts of data are now accessible for analysis. These coupled with powerful data science methods and machine learning algorithms present a unique opportunity to identify untapped energy-saving potentials from field information, and effectively turn buildings into active assets of the built energy infrastructure.However, the diversity of building occupants, infrastructures, and the disparities in collected information has produced disjointed scales of analytics that make it tedious for approaches to scale and generalize over the building stock.This coupled with the lack of standards in the sector has hindered the broader adoption of data science practices in the field, and engendered the following questioning:How can data science facilitate the scaling of approaches and bridge disconnected spatiotemporal scales of the built environment to deliver enhanced energy-saving strategies?This thesis focuses on addressing this interrogation by investigating data-driven, scalable, interpretable, and multi-scale approaches across varying types of analytical classes. The work particularly explores descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics to connect occupants, buildings, and urban energy planning together for improved energy performances.First, a novel multi-dimensional data-mining framework is developed, producing distinct dimensional outlines supporting systematic methodological approaches and refined knowledge discovery. Second, an automated building heat dynamics identification method is put forward, supporting large-scale thermal performance examination of buildings in a non-intrusive manner. The method produced 64\% of good quality model fits, against 14\% close, and 22\% poor ones out of 225 Dutch residential buildings. %, which were open-sourced in the interest of developing benchmarks. Third, a pioneering hierarchical forecasting method was designed, bridging individual and aggregated building load predictions in a coherent, data-efficient fashion. The approach was evaluated over hierarchies of 37, 140, and 383 nodal elements and showcased improved accuracy and coherency performances against disjointed prediction systems.Finally, building occupants and urban energy planning strategies are investigated under the prism of uncertainty. In a neighborhood of 41 Dutch residential buildings, occupants were determined to significantly impact optimal energy community designs in the context of weather and economic uncertainties.Overall, the thesis demonstrated the added value of multi-scale approaches in all analytical classes while fostering best data-science practices in the sector from benchmarks and open-source implementations

    Context-driven progressive enhancement of mobile web applications: a multicriteria decision-making approach

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    Personal computing has become all about mobile and embedded devices. As a result, the adoption rate of smartphones is rapidly increasing and this trend has set a need for mobile applications to be available at anytime, anywhere and on any device. Despite the obvious advantages of such immersive mobile applications, software developers are increasingly facing the challenges related to device fragmentation. Current application development solutions are insufficiently prepared for handling the enormous variety of software platforms and hardware characteristics covering the mobile eco-system. As a result, maintaining a viable balance between development costs and market coverage has turned out to be a challenging issue when developing mobile applications. This article proposes a context-aware software platform for the development and delivery of self-adaptive mobile applications over the Web. An adaptive application composition approach is introduced, capable of autonomously bypassing context-related fragmentation issues. This goal is achieved by incorporating and validating the concept of fine-grained progressive application enhancements based on a multicriteria decision-making strategy
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