485,069 research outputs found
Hydro/Battery Hybrid Systems for frequency regulation
An innovative Hydro/Battery Hybrid System (HBHS), composed of a hydropower plant (HPP) and a Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) is proposed to provide frequency regulation services in the Nordic Power System (NPS). The HBHS is envisioned to have a faster and more efficient response compared to HPPs currently providing these services, whilst retaining their high energy capacity and endurance, thus alleviating stand-alone BESS operation constraints. This Thesis aims to explore the operation and optimization of such a hybrid system in order to make it efficient and economically viable. A power plant perspective is employed, evaluating the impact different control algorithms and parameters have on the HBHS performance.
Providing Frequency Containment Reserves for Normal Operation (FCR-N), to the national TSO in Sweden, is defined from technology and market analyses as the use case for the HBHS. The characteristics of HPPs suitable for HBHS implementation are found theoretically, by evaluating HPP operational constraints and regulation mechanisms. With the aim of evaluating the dynamic performance of the proposed HBHS, a frequency regulation model of the NPS is built in MATLAB and Simulink. Two different HBHS architectures are introduced, the Hydro Recharge, in which the BESS is regulating the frequency and the HPP is controlling its state of charge (SoC), and the Frequency Split, in which both elements are regulating the frequency with the HPP additionally compensating for the SoC. The dynamic performance of the units is qualitatively evaluated through existing and proposed FCR-N prequalification tests, prescribed by the TSO and ENTSO-E. Quantitative performance comparison to a benchmark HPP is performed with regards to the estimated HPP regulation wear and tear and BESS degradation during 30-day operation with historical frequency data.
The two proposed HBHS architectures demonstrate significant reductions of estimated HPP wear and tear compared to the benchmark unit. Simulations consistently report a 90 % reduction in the number of movements HPP regulation mechanism performs and a more than 50 % decrease in the distance it travels. The BESS lifetime is evaluated at acceptable levels and compared for different architectures. Two different applications are identified, the first being installing the HBHS to enable the HPP to pass FCR-N prequalification tests. The second application is increasing the FCR-N capacity of the HPP by installing the HBHS. The Frequency Split HBHS shows more efficient performance when installed in the first application, as opposed to the Hydro Recharge HBHS, which shows better performance in the second application. Finally, it is concluded that a large-scale implementation of HBHSs would improve the frequency quality in the NPS, linearly decreasing the amount of time outside the normal frequency band with increasing the total installed HBHS power capacity
Optimal Sizing of Voltage Control Devices for Distribution Circuit with Intermittent Load
We consider joint control of a switchable capacitor and a D-STATCOM for
voltage regulation in a distribution circuit with intermittent load. The
control problem is formulated as a two-timescale optimal power flow problem
with chance constraints, which minimizes power loss while limiting the
probability of voltage violations due to fast changes in load. The control
problem forms the basis of an optimization problem which determines the sizes
of the control devices by minimizing sum of the expected power loss cost and
the capital cost. We develop computationally efficient heuristics to solve the
optimal sizing problem and implement real-time control. Numerical experiments
on a circuit with high-performance computing (HPC) load show that the proposed
sizing and control schemes significantly improve the reliability of voltage
regulation on the expense of only a moderate increase in cost.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to HICSS'1
How enzyme economy shapes metabolic fluxes
Metabolic fluxes are governed by physical and economic principles.
Stationarity constrains them to a subspace in flux space and thermodynamics
makes them lead from higher to lower chemical potentials. At the same time,
fluxes in cells represent a compromise between metabolic performance and enzyme
cost. To capture this, some flux prediction methods penalise larger fluxes by
heuristic cost terms. Economic flux analysis, in contrast, postulates a balance
between enzyme costs and metabolic benefits as a necessary condition for fluxes
to be realised by kinetic models with optimal enzyme levels. The constraints
are formulated using economic potentials, state variables that capture the
enzyme labour embodied in metabolites. Generally, fluxes must lead from lower
to higher economic potentials. This principle, which resembles thermodynamic
constraints, can complement stationarity and thermodynamic constraints in flux
analysis. Futile modes, which would be incompatible with economic potentials,
are defined algebraically and can be systematically removed from flux
distributions. Enzymes that participate in potential futile modes are likely
targets of regulation. Economic flux analysis can predict high-yield and
low-yield strategies, and captures preemptive expression, multi-objective
optimisation, and flux distributions across several cells living in symbiosis.
Inspired by labour value theories in economics, it justifies and extends the
principle of minimal fluxes and provides an intuitive framework to model the
complex interplay of fluxes, metabolic control, and enzyme costs in cells
Warp-Aware Adaptive Energy Efficiency Calibration for Multi-GPU Systems
Massive GPU acceleration processors have been used in high-performance computing systems. The Dennard-scaling has led to power and thermal constraints limiting the performance of such systems. The demand for both increased performance and energy-efficiency is highly desired. This paper presents a multi-layer low-power optimisation method for warps and tasks parallelisms. We present a dynamic frequency regulation scheme for performance parameters in terms of load balance and load imbalance. The method monitors the energy parameters in runtime and adjusts adaptively the voltage level to ensure the performance efficiency with energy reduction. The experimental results show that the multi-layer low-power optimisation with dynamic frequency regulation can achieve 40% energy consumption reduction with only 1.6% performance degradation, thus reducing 59% maximum energy consumption. It can further save about 30% energy consumption in comparison with the single-layer energy optimisation
Adaptive output regulation for a class of nonlinear systems with guaranteed transient performance
This paper is dedicated to adaptive output regulation for a class of nonlinear systems with asymptotic output tracking and guarantee of prescribed transient performance. With the employment of internal model principle, we first transform this problem into a specific adaptive stabilization problem with output constraints. Then, by integrating the time-varying Barrier Lyapunov Function (BLF) technique together with the high gain feedback method, we develop an output-based control law to solve the constrained stabilization problem and consequently confine the output tracking error to a predefined arbitrary region. The output-based control law enables adaptive output regulation in the sense that, under unknown exosystem dynamics, all the closed-loop system signals are bounded whilst the controlled output constraints are not violated. Finally, efficacy of the proposed design is illustrated through a simulation example
Buildings-to-Grid Integration Framework
This paper puts forth a mathematical framework for Buildings-to-Grid (BtG)
integration in smart cities. The framework explicitly couples power grid and
building's control actions and operational decisions, and can be utilized by
buildings and power grids operators to simultaneously optimize their
performance. Simplified dynamics of building clusters and building-integrated
power networks with algebraic equations are presented---both operating at
different time-scales. A model predictive control (MPC)-based algorithm that
formulates the BtG integration and accounts for the time-scale discrepancy is
developed. The formulation captures dynamic and algebraic power flow
constraints of power networks and is shown to be numerically advantageous. The
paper analytically establishes that the BtG integration yields a reduced total
system cost in comparison with decoupled designs where grid and building
operators determine their controls separately. The developed framework is
tested on standard power networks that include thousands of buildings modeled
using industrial data. Case studies demonstrate building energy savings and
significant frequency regulation, while these findings carry over in network
simulations with nonlinear power flows and mismatch in building model
parameters. Finally, simulations indicate that the performance does not
significantly worsen when there is uncertainty in the forecasted weather and
base load conditions.Comment: In Press, IEEE Transactions on Smart Gri
- …