229 research outputs found

    Bilevel programming approach to optimizing a time-variant electricity tariff for demand response

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    Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization and Demand-Side Management: Models and Algorithms

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    Inventory management is a fudamental problem in supply chain management. It is widely used in practice, but it is also intrinsically hard to optimize, even for relatively simple inventory system structures. This challenge has also been heightened under the threat of supply disruptions. Whenever a supply source is disrupted, the inventory system is paralyzed, and tremenduous costs can occur as a consequence. Designing a reliable and robust inventory system that can withstand supply disruptions is vital for an inventory system\u27s performance.First we consider a basic type of inventory network, an assembly system, which produces a single end product from one or several components. A property called long-run balance allows an assembly system to be reduced to a serial system when disruptions are not present. We show that a modified version is still true under disruption risk. Based on this property, we propose a method for reducing the system into a serial system with extra inventory at certain stages that face supply disruptions. We also propose a heuristic for solving the reduced system. A numerical study shows that this heuristic performs very well, yielding significant cost savings when compared with the best-known algorithm.Next we study another basic inventory network structure, a distribution system. We study continuous-review, multi-echelon distribution systems subject to supply disruptions, with Poisson customer demands under a first-come, first-served allocation policy. We develop a recursive optimization heuristic, which applies a bottom-up approach that sequentially approximates the base-stock levels of all the locations. Our numerical study shows that it performs very well.Finally we consider a problem related to smart grids, an area where supply and demand are still decisive factors. Instead of matching supply with demand, as in the first two parts of the dissertation, now we concentrate on the interaction between supply and demand. We consider an electricity service provider that wishes to set prices for a large customer (user or aggregator) with flexible loads so that the resulting load profile matches a predetermined profile as closely as possible. We model the deterministic demand case as a bilevel problem in which the service provider sets price coefficients and the customer responds by shifting loads forward in time. We derive optimality conditions for the lower-level problem to obtain a single-level problem that can be solved efficiently. For the stochastic-demand case, we approximate the consumer\u27s best response function and use this approximation to calculate the service provider\u27s optimal strategy. Our numerical study shows the tractability of the new models for both the deterministic and stochastic cases, and that our pricing scheme is very effective for the service provider to shape consumer demand

    A two-stage stochastic bilevel programming approach for offering strategy of DER aggregators in local and wholesale electricity markets

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    A two-stage stochastic programming scheme is proposed in order to evaluate the offering strategy of a distributed energy resource aggregator in both wholesale and local electricity markets and appropriately cope with uncertainties associated with its decision-making problem. In this regard, the aggregator combines a broad range of virtual and real distributed energy resources to simultaneously participate in the local electricity market as a price-maker or strategic player and the wholesale electricity market as a price-taker or non-strategic player. To model the studied aggregator as a strategic entity in the local market, a bilevel programming approach is exploited in this work. Accordingly, at the upper level of the raised problem, the aggregator tends to promote its expected profit through taking part in the wholesale and local electricity markets, while at the lower level, the considered local market is cleared in a way to maximise the social welfare. In the end, the effectiveness of the proposed framework for the simultaneous participation of the distributed energy resource aggregator in these two markets has been explored utilising a case study.© 2022 The Authors. IET Renewable Power Generation 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
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