523 research outputs found

    An Adaptive Modular Redundancy Technique to Self-regulate Availability, Area, and Energy Consumption in Mission-critical Applications

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    As reconfigurable devices\u27 capacities and the complexity of applications that use them increase, the need for self-reliance of deployed systems becomes increasingly prominent. A Sustainable Modular Adaptive Redundancy Technique (SMART) composed of a dual-layered organic system is proposed, analyzed, implemented, and experimentally evaluated. SMART relies upon a variety of self-regulating properties to control availability, energy consumption, and area used, in dynamically-changing environments that require high degree of adaptation. The hardware layer is implemented on a Xilinx Virtex-4 Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) to provide self-repair using a novel approach called a Reconfigurable Adaptive Redundancy System (RARS). The software layer supervises the organic activities within the FPGA and extends the self-healing capabilities through application-independent, intrinsic, evolutionary repair techniques to leverage the benefits of dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (PR). A SMART prototype is evaluated using a Sobel edge detection application. This prototype is shown to provide sustainability for stressful occurrences of transient and permanent fault injection procedures while still reducing energy consumption and area requirements. An Organic Genetic Algorithm (OGA) technique is shown capable of consistently repairing hard faults while maintaining correct edge detector outputs, by exploiting spatial redundancy in the reconfigurable hardware. A Monte Carlo driven Continuous Markov Time Chains (CTMC) simulation is conducted to compare SMART\u27s availability to industry-standard Triple Modular Technique (TMR) techniques. Based on nine use cases, parameterized with realistic fault and repair rates acquired from publically available sources, the results indicate that availability is significantly enhanced by the adoption of fast repair techniques targeting aging-related hard-faults. Under harsh environments, SMART is shown to improve system availability from 36.02% with lengthy repair techniques to 98.84% with fast ones. This value increases to five nines (99.9998%) under relatively more favorable conditions. Lastly, SMART is compared to twenty eight standard TMR benchmarks that are generated by the widely-accepted BL-TMR tools. Results show that in seven out of nine use cases, SMART is the recommended technique, with power savings ranging from 22% to 29%, and area savings ranging from 17% to 24%, while still maintaining the same level of availability

    Autonomous Recovery Of Reconfigurable Logic Devices Using Priority Escalation Of Slack

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    Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) devices offer a suitable platform for survivable hardware architectures in mission-critical systems. In this dissertation, active dynamic redundancy-based fault-handling techniques are proposed which exploit the dynamic partial reconfiguration capability of SRAM-based FPGAs. Self-adaptation is realized by employing reconfiguration in detection, diagnosis, and recovery phases. To extend these concepts to semiconductor aging and process variation in the deep submicron era, resilient adaptable processing systems are sought to maintain quality and throughput requirements despite the vulnerabilities of the underlying computational devices. A new approach to autonomous fault-handling which addresses these goals is developed using only a uniplex hardware arrangement. It operates by observing a health metric to achieve Fault Demotion using Recon- figurable Slack (FaDReS). Here an autonomous fault isolation scheme is employed which neither requires test vectors nor suspends the computational throughput, but instead observes the value of a health metric based on runtime input. The deterministic flow of the fault isolation scheme guarantees success in a bounded number of reconfigurations of the FPGA fabric. FaDReS is then extended to the Priority Using Resource Escalation (PURE) online redundancy scheme which considers fault-isolation latency and throughput trade-offs under a dynamic spare arrangement. While deep-submicron designs introduce new challenges, use of adaptive techniques are seen to provide several promising avenues for improving resilience. The scheme developed is demonstrated by hardware design of various signal processing circuits and their implementation on a Xilinx Virtex-4 FPGA device. These include a Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) core, Motion Estimation (ME) engine, Finite Impulse Response (FIR) Filter, Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) blocks in addition to MCNC benchmark circuits. A iii significant reduction in power consumption is achieved ranging from 83% for low motion-activity scenes to 12.5% for high motion activity video scenes in a novel ME engine configuration. For a typical benchmark video sequence, PURE is shown to maintain a PSNR baseline near 32dB. The diagnosability, reconfiguration latency, and resource overhead of each approach is analyzed. Compared to previous alternatives, PURE maintains a PSNR within a difference of 4.02dB to 6.67dB from the fault-free baseline by escalating healthy resources to higher-priority signal processing functions. The results indicate the benefits of priority-aware resiliency over conventional redundancy approaches in terms of fault-recovery, power consumption, and resource-area requirements. Together, these provide a broad range of strategies to achieve autonomous recovery of reconfigurable logic devices under a variety of constraints, operating conditions, and optimization criteria

    Towards Energy-Efficient and Reliable Computing: From Highly-Scaled CMOS Devices to Resistive Memories

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    The continuous increase in transistor density based on Moore\u27s Law has led us to highly scaled Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technologies. These transistor-based process technologies offer improved density as well as a reduction in nominal supply voltage. An analysis regarding different aspects of 45nm and 15nm technologies, such as power consumption and cell area to compare these two technologies is proposed on an IEEE 754 Single Precision Floating-Point Unit implementation. Based on the results, using the 15nm technology offers 4-times less energy and 3-fold smaller footprint. New challenges also arise, such as relative proportion of leakage power in standby mode that can be addressed by post-CMOS technologies. Spin-Transfer Torque Random Access Memory (STT-MRAM) has been explored as a post-CMOS technology for embedded and data storage applications seeking non-volatility, near-zero standby energy, and high density. Towards attaining these objectives for practical implementations, various techniques to mitigate the specific reliability challenges associated with STT-MRAM elements are surveyed, classified, and assessed herein. Cost and suitability metrics assessed include the area of nanomagmetic and CMOS components per bit, access time and complexity, Sense Margin (SM), and energy or power consumption costs versus resiliency benefits. In an attempt to further improve the Process Variation (PV) immunity of the Sense Amplifiers (SAs), a new SA has been introduced called Adaptive Sense Amplifier (ASA). ASA can benefit from low Bit Error Rate (BER) and low Energy Delay Product (EDP) by combining the properties of two of the commonly used SAs, Pre-Charge Sense Amplifier (PCSA) and Separated Pre-Charge Sense Amplifier (SPCSA). ASA can operate in either PCSA or SPCSA mode based on the requirements of the circuit such as energy efficiency or reliability. Then, ASA is utilized to propose a novel approach to actually leverage the PV in Non-Volatile Memory (NVM) arrays using Self-Organized Sub-bank (SOS) design. SOS engages the preferred SA alternative based on the intrinsic as-built behavior of the resistive sensing timing margin to reduce the latency and power consumption while maintaining acceptable access time

    A Survey of FPGA Optimization Methods for Data Center Energy Efficiency

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    This article provides a survey of academic literature about field programmable gate array (FPGA) and their utilization for energy efficiency acceleration in data centers. The goal is to critically present the existing FPGA energy optimization techniques and discuss how they can be applied to such systems. To do so, the article explores current energy trends and their projection to the future with particular attention to the requirements set out by the European Code of Conduct for Data Center Energy Efficiency. The article then proposes a complete analysis of over ten years of research in energy optimization techniques, classifying them by purpose, method of application, and impacts on the sources of consumption. Finally, we conclude with the challenges and possible innovations we expect for this sector.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Computin

    MFPA: Mixed-Signal Field Programmable Array for Energy-Aware Compressive Signal Processing

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    Compressive Sensing (CS) is a signal processing technique which reduces the number of samples taken per frame to decrease energy, storage, and data transmission overheads, as well as reducing time taken for data acquisition in time-critical applications. The tradeoff in such an approach is increased complexity of signal reconstruction. While several algorithms have been developed for CS signal reconstruction, hardware implementation of these algorithms is still an area of active research. Prior work has sought to utilize parallelism available in reconstruction algorithms to minimize hardware overheads; however, such approaches are limited by the underlying limitations in CMOS technology. Herein, the MFPA (Mixed-signal Field Programmable Array) approach is presented as a hybrid spin-CMOS reconfigurable fabric specifically designed for implementation of CS data sampling and signal reconstruction. The resulting fabric consists of 1) slice-organized analog blocks providing amplifiers, transistors, capacitors, and Magnetic Tunnel Junctions (MTJs) which are configurable to achieving square/square root operations required for calculating vector norms, 2) digital functional blocks which feature 6-input clockless lookup tables for computation of matrix inverse, and 3) an MRAM-based nonvolatile crossbar array for carrying out low-energy matrix-vector multiplication operations. The various functional blocks are connected via a global interconnect and spin-based analog-to-digital converters. Simulation results demonstrate significant energy and area benefits compared to equivalent CMOS digital implementations for each of the functional blocks used: this includes an 80% reduction in energy and 97% reduction in transistor count for the nonvolatile crossbar array, 80% standby power reduction and 25% reduced area footprint for the clockless lookup tables, and roughly 97% reduction in transistor count for a multiplier built using components from the analog blocks. Moreover, the proposed fabric yields 77% energy reduction compared to CMOS when used to implement CS reconstruction, in addition to latency improvements

    Leveraging Signal Transfer Characteristics and Parasitics of Spintronic Circuits for Area and Energy-Optimized Hybrid Digital and Analog Arithmetic

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    While Internet of Things (IoT) sensors offer numerous benefits in diverse applications, they are limited by stringent constraints in energy, processing area and memory. These constraints are especially challenging within applications such as Compressive Sensing (CS) and Machine Learning (ML) via Deep Neural Networks (DNNs), which require dot product computations on large data sets. A solution to these challenges has been offered by the development of crossbar array architectures, enabled by recent advances in spintronic devices such as Magnetic Tunnel Junctions (MTJs). Crossbar arrays offer a compact, low-energy and in-memory approach to dot product computation in the analog domain by leveraging intrinsic signal-transfer characteristics of the embedded MTJ devices. The first phase of this dissertation research seeks to build on these benefits by optimizing resource allocation within spintronic crossbar arrays. A hardware approach to non-uniform CS is developed, which dynamically configures sampling rates by deriving necessary control signals using circuit parasitics. Next, an alternate approach to non-uniform CS based on adaptive quantization is developed, which reduces circuit area in addition to energy consumption. Adaptive quantization is then applied to DNNs by developing an architecture allowing for layer-wise quantization based on relative robustness levels. The second phase of this research focuses on extension of the analog computation paradigm by development of an operational amplifier-based arithmetic unit for generalized scalar operations. This approach allows for 95% area reduction in scalar multiplications, compared to the state-of-the-art digital alternative. Moreover, analog computation of enhanced activation functions allows for significant improvement in DNN accuracy, which can be harnessed through triple modular redundancy to yield 81.2% reduction in power at the cost of only 4% accuracy loss, compared to a larger network. Together these results substantiate promising approaches to several challenges facing the design of future IoT sensors within the targeted applications of CS and ML

    Embedded electronic systems driven by run-time reconfigurable hardware

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    Abstract This doctoral thesis addresses the design of embedded electronic systems based on run-time reconfigurable hardware technology –available through SRAM-based FPGA/SoC devices– aimed at contributing to enhance the life quality of the human beings. This work does research on the conception of the system architecture and the reconfiguration engine that provides to the FPGA the capability of dynamic partial reconfiguration in order to synthesize, by means of hardware/software co-design, a given application partitioned in processing tasks which are multiplexed in time and space, optimizing thus its physical implementation –silicon area, processing time, complexity, flexibility, functional density, cost and power consumption– in comparison with other alternatives based on static hardware (MCU, DSP, GPU, ASSP, ASIC, etc.). The design flow of such technology is evaluated through the prototyping of several engineering applications (control systems, mathematical coprocessors, complex image processors, etc.), showing a high enough level of maturity for its exploitation in the industry.Resumen Esta tesis doctoral abarca el diseño de sistemas electrónicos embebidos basados en tecnología hardware dinámicamente reconfigurable –disponible a través de dispositivos lógicos programables SRAM FPGA/SoC– que contribuyan a la mejora de la calidad de vida de la sociedad. Se investiga la arquitectura del sistema y del motor de reconfiguración que proporcione a la FPGA la capacidad de reconfiguración dinámica parcial de sus recursos programables, con objeto de sintetizar, mediante codiseño hardware/software, una determinada aplicación particionada en tareas multiplexadas en tiempo y en espacio, optimizando así su implementación física –área de silicio, tiempo de procesado, complejidad, flexibilidad, densidad funcional, coste y potencia disipada– comparada con otras alternativas basadas en hardware estático (MCU, DSP, GPU, ASSP, ASIC, etc.). Se evalúa el flujo de diseño de dicha tecnología a través del prototipado de varias aplicaciones de ingeniería (sistemas de control, coprocesadores aritméticos, procesadores de imagen, etc.), evidenciando un nivel de madurez viable ya para su explotación en la industria.Resum Aquesta tesi doctoral està orientada al disseny de sistemes electrònics empotrats basats en tecnologia hardware dinàmicament reconfigurable –disponible mitjançant dispositius lògics programables SRAM FPGA/SoC– que contribueixin a la millora de la qualitat de vida de la societat. S’investiga l’arquitectura del sistema i del motor de reconfiguració que proporcioni a la FPGA la capacitat de reconfiguració dinàmica parcial dels seus recursos programables, amb l’objectiu de sintetitzar, mitjançant codisseny hardware/software, una determinada aplicació particionada en tasques multiplexades en temps i en espai, optimizant així la seva implementació física –àrea de silici, temps de processat, complexitat, flexibilitat, densitat funcional, cost i potència dissipada– comparada amb altres alternatives basades en hardware estàtic (MCU, DSP, GPU, ASSP, ASIC, etc.). S’evalúa el fluxe de disseny d’aquesta tecnologia a través del prototipat de varies aplicacions d’enginyeria (sistemes de control, coprocessadors aritmètics, processadors d’imatge, etc.), demostrant un nivell de maduresa viable ja per a la seva explotació a la indústria

    Competitive power control of distributed power plants

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    Joint Doctoral Programme in Electric Energy Systems : Universidad de Málaga, Universidad de Sevilla, Universidad del País Vasco y Universitat Politècnica de CatalunyaNowadays, the electrical energy sector is currently found in a dramatic changing paradigm, which moves towards an increasing trend in generating power at distribution levels, where electricity is typically consumed, by means of non-conventional/renewable based generation units. These new generation technologies, termed as distributed generation, not only offers a non-pollutant, cheap and efficient source of energy to cover increasing demand, but also enhance the reliability of supply to critical loads and reduce the need for additional grid reinforcements. Aside of the technical benefits provided, distributed generation will massively integrate renewable energy resources, with new type of loads and end-user actors, such as prosumers, demand responsive loads, or electric vehicles. Where these actors will actively participate in energy and auxiliary service markets, depending on their available or constrained energy needs. For this reason, the work presented in this Thesis deals with designing and implementing advanced hierarchical control solutions to renewable-based power plants with the purpose of achieving advanced grid conection performance while reaching maximum economic benefits from its optimum real-time operation. Initially, an extensive analysis on the main renewable-based power plant hierarchical control solutions currently on the shelf, is performed. This study not only covered the specific case of renewable-based power plants, but also advanced microgrid and smart grid control solutions. Once the main renewable-based power plant hierarchical solutions were analized, a novel Hierarchical Distributed Control Structure (HDCS) is proposed for increased management of renewable-based active distributed plants. This hierarchical control structure comprises all possible functional levels from the higher long-term economic scheduling layer, to the instantaneous supervisory control of the resource, emphasizing the entire operation and control functionalities needed for increasing the integration of active distributed power plants. In order to achieve real-time control capabilities in active distribution systems, the present thesis introduces a novel power sharing control strategy, based on the competitive operation of multiple active participating agents (distributed generators, demand response and energy storage systems) through the implementation of market rules. Such control capabilities are satisfied by applying a price control signal over the entire grid control architecture, being the final-end participating agent, the responsible entity in charge of deciding its own generation/demand involvement based on its marginal or affordable electricity costs. In addition, it reduces the information volume to be transmitted and processing requirements, as the higher control levels do not need to have knowledge on the detailed distribution system topology and contributing actors. In order to have a meaningful evaluation of the proposed competitive control capabilities, a wave power plant application has been selected, which constitutes a challenging scenario for the controller itself to achieve advanced real-time control capabilities in such an oscillating renewable energy resource. In order to suitably characterize the wave energy resource profile resulting from maximum energy absorption, this Thesis introduce a novel adaptive vector controller, which maximizes the energy extraction from the resource regardless of the dominant irregular wave frequency characteristics. For the specific wave power plant application considered, the competitive control does not only ensures real-time optimum resource allocation for satisfying a given production objective, but also provides optimum long term operation of the system. As a result, overall plant costs reductions can be achieved under the competitive operation, since the plant scheduled energy is satisfied by making use of the generation units with cheaper cumulative operation costsActualmente, el sector eléctrico se encuentra inmerso en un profundo proceso de restructuración, donde de cada vez más se tiende a generar energía a nivel de distribución, mediante el uso de generación no convencional/renovable. Estas nuevas tecnologías de generación, referidas como generación distribuida, no proporcionan unicamente una fuente de energía no-contaminante, barata y eficiente para cubrir el incremento de demanda, sinó que también pueden proporcionar seguridad de suministro a cargas críticas, así como reducir la necesidad de expansiones futuras de red. Además de las capacidades técnicas proporcionadas, la generación distribuida hará posible la integración masiva de sistemas de generación renovable, con nuevos tipos de cargas y usuarios finales, como prosumidores, cargas regulables, o vehiculos eléctricos, donde todos estos usuarios participaran activamente en mercados de energía y servicios auxiliares, dependiendo de sus requisitos de uso de energía. Por lo tanto, el trabajo realizado en esta tesis se centra en el diseño e implementación de soluciones jerárquicas de control avanzado en plantas de generación renovable, con el objetivo de obtener un comportamiento harmonioso de intercacción con la red, mientras la operación de la planta maximiza los beneficios derivados de su operación en tiempo real. Inicialmente, se ha llevado a cabo una revisión extensa sobre los sistemas de control jerárquico comunmente implementados en plantas de generación renovable, en microredes y en redes inteligentes. Una vez revisados los principales sistemas de control jerárquico en este tipo de aplicaciones, se propone un una novedosa estructura de control, que cubre todos los niveles de control posibles, desde el más alto nivel de gestión económica, hasta el control detallado del recurso de generación. Para lograr capacidades de control en tiempo real en sistemas activos de distribución, la presente tesis propone una nueva estrategia de control de reparto de potencia, basada en la operación competitiva de múltiples agentes participantes activos (generadores distribuidos, respuesta de demanda y sistemas de almacenamiento de energía) mediante la implementación de reglas del mercado. Dichas capacidades de control se satisfacen aplicando una señal de precio a lo largo de toda la arquitectura de control, siendo el agente de final, el ente responsable de decidir su propia participación en la generación/demanda en función de sus propios costes de electricidad marginales o asumibles. Además, reduce el volumen de información a transmitir y los requisitos de procesamiento de datos, ya que los niveles de control más altos no necesitan tener conocimiento sobre la topología del sistema de distribución detallado ni de la contribución de los actores adyacentes. Para llevar a cabo una evaluación significativa de las capacidades del controlador competitivo propuesto, se ha seleccionado una planta de generación undimotriz, como escenario más desfavorable, ya que el controlador debe asegurar un control estable de la potencia inyectada en un escenario altamente oscilante. Con el fin de caracterizar adecuadamente el perfil de recursos de energía de las olas resultante de la máxima absorción de energía, esta Tesis introduce un nuevo controlador de vector adaptativo, que maximiza la extracción de energía del recurso independientemente de las características dominantes de frecuencia de onda irregular. Para la aplicación de la planta de energía de onda específica considerada, el control competitivo no solo garantiza la asignación óptima de recursos en tiempo real para satisfacer un objetivo de producción dado, sino que también proporciona una operación óptima del sistema a largo plazo. Como resultado, se pueden lograr reducciones generales de los costos de la planta en el marco de la operación competitiva, ya que la energía programada de la planta se satisface haciendo uso de las unidadPostprint (published version

    Competitive power control of distributed power plants

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, the electrical energy sector is currently found in a dramatic changing paradigm, which moves towards an increasing trend in generating power at distribution levels, where electricity is typically consumed, by means of non-conventional/renewable based generation units. These new generation technologies, termed as distributed generation, not only offers a non-pollutant, cheap and efficient source of energy to cover increasing demand, but also enhance the reliability of supply to critical loads and reduce the need for additional grid reinforcements. Aside of the technical benefits provided, distributed generation will massively integrate renewable energy resources, with new type of loads and end-user actors, such as prosumers, demand responsive loads, or electric vehicles. Where these actors will actively participate in energy and auxiliary service markets, depending on their available or constrained energy needs. For this reason, the work presented in this Thesis deals with designing and implementing advanced hierarchical control solutions to renewable-based power plants with the purpose of achieving advanced grid conection performance while reaching maximum economic benefits from its optimum real-time operation. Initially, an extensive analysis on the main renewable-based power plant hierarchical control solutions currently on the shelf, is performed. This study not only covered the specific case of renewable-based power plants, but also advanced microgrid and smart grid control solutions. Once the main renewable-based power plant hierarchical solutions were analized, a novel Hierarchical Distributed Control Structure (HDCS) is proposed for increased management of renewable-based active distributed plants. This hierarchical control structure comprises all possible functional levels from the higher long-term economic scheduling layer, to the instantaneous supervisory control of the resource, emphasizing the entire operation and control functionalities needed for increasing the integration of active distributed power plants. In order to achieve real-time control capabilities in active distribution systems, the present thesis introduces a novel power sharing control strategy, based on the competitive operation of multiple active participating agents (distributed generators, demand response and energy storage systems) through the implementation of market rules. Such control capabilities are satisfied by applying a price control signal over the entire grid control architecture, being the final-end participating agent, the responsible entity in charge of deciding its own generation/demand involvement based on its marginal or affordable electricity costs. In addition, it reduces the information volume to be transmitted and processing requirements, as the higher control levels do not need to have knowledge on the detailed distribution system topology and contributing actors. In order to have a meaningful evaluation of the proposed competitive control capabilities, a wave power plant application has been selected, which constitutes a challenging scenario for the controller itself to achieve advanced real-time control capabilities in such an oscillating renewable energy resource. In order to suitably characterize the wave energy resource profile resulting from maximum energy absorption, this Thesis introduce a novel adaptive vector controller, which maximizes the energy extraction from the resource regardless of the dominant irregular wave frequency characteristics. For the specific wave power plant application considered, the competitive control does not only ensures real-time optimum resource allocation for satisfying a given production objective, but also provides optimum long term operation of the system. As a result, overall plant costs reductions can be achieved under the competitive operation, since the plant scheduled energy is satisfied by making use of the generation units with cheaper cumulative operation costsActualmente, el sector eléctrico se encuentra inmerso en un profundo proceso de restructuración, donde de cada vez más se tiende a generar energía a nivel de distribución, mediante el uso de generación no convencional/renovable. Estas nuevas tecnologías de generación, referidas como generación distribuida, no proporcionan unicamente una fuente de energía no-contaminante, barata y eficiente para cubrir el incremento de demanda, sinó que también pueden proporcionar seguridad de suministro a cargas críticas, así como reducir la necesidad de expansiones futuras de red. Además de las capacidades técnicas proporcionadas, la generación distribuida hará posible la integración masiva de sistemas de generación renovable, con nuevos tipos de cargas y usuarios finales, como prosumidores, cargas regulables, o vehiculos eléctricos, donde todos estos usuarios participaran activamente en mercados de energía y servicios auxiliares, dependiendo de sus requisitos de uso de energía. Por lo tanto, el trabajo realizado en esta tesis se centra en el diseño e implementación de soluciones jerárquicas de control avanzado en plantas de generación renovable, con el objetivo de obtener un comportamiento harmonioso de intercacción con la red, mientras la operación de la planta maximiza los beneficios derivados de su operación en tiempo real. Inicialmente, se ha llevado a cabo una revisión extensa sobre los sistemas de control jerárquico comunmente implementados en plantas de generación renovable, en microredes y en redes inteligentes. Una vez revisados los principales sistemas de control jerárquico en este tipo de aplicaciones, se propone un una novedosa estructura de control, que cubre todos los niveles de control posibles, desde el más alto nivel de gestión económica, hasta el control detallado del recurso de generación. Para lograr capacidades de control en tiempo real en sistemas activos de distribución, la presente tesis propone una nueva estrategia de control de reparto de potencia, basada en la operación competitiva de múltiples agentes participantes activos (generadores distribuidos, respuesta de demanda y sistemas de almacenamiento de energía) mediante la implementación de reglas del mercado. Dichas capacidades de control se satisfacen aplicando una señal de precio a lo largo de toda la arquitectura de control, siendo el agente de final, el ente responsable de decidir su propia participación en la generación/demanda en función de sus propios costes de electricidad marginales o asumibles. Además, reduce el volumen de información a transmitir y los requisitos de procesamiento de datos, ya que los niveles de control más altos no necesitan tener conocimiento sobre la topología del sistema de distribución detallado ni de la contribución de los actores adyacentes. Para llevar a cabo una evaluación significativa de las capacidades del controlador competitivo propuesto, se ha seleccionado una planta de generación undimotriz, como escenario más desfavorable, ya que el controlador debe asegurar un control estable de la potencia inyectada en un escenario altamente oscilante. Con el fin de caracterizar adecuadamente el perfil de recursos de energía de las olas resultante de la máxima absorción de energía, esta Tesis introduce un nuevo controlador de vector adaptativo, que maximiza la extracción de energía del recurso independientemente de las características dominantes de frecuencia de onda irregular. Para la aplicación de la planta de energía de onda específica considerada, el control competitivo no solo garantiza la asignación óptima de recursos en tiempo real para satisfacer un objetivo de producción dado, sino que también proporciona una operación óptima del sistema a largo plazo. Como resultado, se pueden lograr reducciones generales de los costos de la planta en el marco de la operación competitiva, ya que la energía programada de la planta se satisface haciendo uso de las unida
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