295 research outputs found

    Flexible operation of shared energy storage at households to facilitate PV penetration

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    This paper proposes a new methodology to enable high penetration of photovoltaic (PV) generation in low voltage (LV) distribution networks by using shared battery storage and variable tariffs. The battery installed at customer premises is shared between customers and local distribution network operators (DNOs) to achieve two goals-minimizing energy costs for customers and releasing distribution network constraints for DNOs. The two objectives are realised through a new concept - “charging envelope”, which dynamically allocates storage capacity between customers and the DNO. Charging envelope first reserves a portion of storage capacity for network operator's priority to mitigate network problems caused by either thermal or voltage limit violation in order to defer or even reduce network investment. Then, the remaining capacity is used by customers to respond to energy price variations to facilitate in-home PV penetration. Case study results show that the concept can provide an attractive solution to realise the dual conflicting objectives for network operators and customers. The proposed concept has been adopted by the Western Power Distribution (UK) in a smart grid demonstration project SoLa Bristol.</p

    Planning of Regional Urban Bus Charging Facility:A Case Study of Fengxian, Shanghai

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    The electrification of public transport is of great significance to alleviating environmental pollution and energy problems. The construction of charging stations for electric buses (EBs) is the key step for the electrification of public transport and receives more and more attention. This paper proposes a new urban electric bus charging station planning algorithm which consists of two parts, park-maintaining (PM) charging station planning and midway supply (MS) charging station planning. Firstly, bus routes are classified based on charging demands. Accordingly, the PM charging station planning model is divided into full slow charging (FSC) model, Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) model and Hybrid model. Secondly, the improved grid AP algorithm is applied to plan MS charging stations to enhance the EB operation reliability. Then by multi-terminal charging pile optimization model, the economics of charging facilities construction is enhanced. Finally, via an ordered control charging algorithm, the economic profits of overall planning schemes are enhanced. The bus system in Fengxian, Shanghai is taken as an example to demonstrate the proposed method. Results prove that the proposed method can effectively meet the charging demands of EBs and improve the operating reliability of the EB system. </p

    4-(4-Fluoro­anilino)-N-(4-fluoro­phen­yl)-3-nitro­benzamide

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    In the title compound, C19H13F2N3O3, the anilinobenzamide unit is essentially planar, with a maximum deviation of 0.036 (3) Å. The nitro group and the benzene ring form dihedral angles of 9.6 (5)and 62.20 (8)°, respectively, with the anilinobenzamide unit. An intra­molecular N—H⋯O inter­action occurs. In the crystal, mol­ecules are linked by weak inter­molecular C—H⋯O, N—H⋯O and C—H⋯F hydrogen bonds, which stabilize the structure

    LMP-based Pricing for Energy Storage in Local Market to Facilitate PV Penetration

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    Increasing Photovoltaic (PV) penetration and low-carbon demand can potentially lead to two different flow peaks, generation, and load, within distribution networks. This will not only constrain PV penetration but also pose serious threats to network reliability. This paper uses energy storage (ES) to reduce system congestion cost caused by the two peaks by sending cost-reflective economic signals to affect ES operation in responding to network conditions. First, a new charging and discharging (C/D) strategy based on binary search method is designed for ES, which responds to system congestion cost over time. Then, a novel pricing method, based on locational marginal pricing (LMP), is designed for ES. The pricing model is derived by evaluating ES impact on the network power flows and congestions from the loss and congestion components in LMP. The impact is then converted into an hourly economic signal to reflect ES operation. The proposed ES C/D strategy and pricing methods are validated on a real local grid supply point area. Results show that the proposed LMP-based pricing is efficient to capture the feature of ES and provide signals for affecting its operation. This work can further increase network flexibility and the capability of networks to accommodate increasing PV penetration.</p

    Optimal CHP Planning in Integrated Energy Systems considering Use-of-System Charges

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    This paper proposes a novel optimal planning model for combined heat and power (CHP) in multiple energy systems of natural gas and electricity to benefit both networks by deferring investment for network owners and reducing use-of-system (UoS) charge for network users. The new planning model considers the technical constraints of both electricity and natural gas systems. A two-stage planning approach is proposed to determine the optimal site and size of CHPs. In the first stage, a long-run incremental cost matrix is designed to reflect CHP locational impact on both natural gas and electricity network investment, used as a criterion to choose the optimal location. In the second stage, CHP size is determined by solving an integrated optimal model with the objective to minimize total incremental network investment costs. The proposed method is resolved by the interior-point method and implemented on a practically integrated electricity and natural gas systems. Two case studies are conducted to test the performance for single and multiple CHPs cases. This paper enables cost-efficient CHP planning to benefit integrated natural gas and electricity networks and network users in terms of reduced network investment cost and consequently reduced UoS charges

    Reversible Entanglement Beyond Quantum Operations

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    We introduce a reversible theory of exact entanglement manipulation by establishing a necessary and sufficient condition for state transfer under trace-preserving transformations that completely preserve the positivity of partial transpose (PPT). Under these free transformations, we show that logarithmic negativity emerges as the pivotal entanglement measure for determining entangled states' transformations, analogous to the role of entropy in the second law of thermodynamics. Previous results have proven that entanglement is irreversible under quantum operations that completely preserve PPT and leave open the question of reversibility for quantum operations that do not generate entanglement asymptotically. However, we find that going beyond the complete positivity constraint imposed by standard quantum mechanics enables a reversible theory of exact entanglement manipulation, which may suggest a potential incompatibility between the reversibility of entanglement and the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics.Comment: 14 pages including appendi

    Statistical Analysis of Quantum State Learning Process in Quantum Neural Networks

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    Quantum neural networks (QNNs) have been a promising framework in pursuing near-term quantum advantage in various fields, where many applications can be viewed as learning a quantum state that encodes useful data. As a quantum analog of probability distribution learning, quantum state learning is theoretically and practically essential in quantum machine learning. In this paper, we develop a no-go theorem for learning an unknown quantum state with QNNs even starting from a high-fidelity initial state. We prove that when the loss value is lower than a critical threshold, the probability of avoiding local minima vanishes exponentially with the qubit count, while only grows polynomially with the circuit depth. The curvature of local minima is concentrated to the quantum Fisher information times a loss-dependent constant, which characterizes the sensibility of the output state with respect to parameters in QNNs. These results hold for any circuit structures, initialization strategies, and work for both fixed ansatzes and adaptive methods. Extensive numerical simulations are performed to validate our theoretical results. Our findings place generic limits on good initial guesses and adaptive methods for improving the learnability and scalability of QNNs, and deepen the understanding of prior information's role in QNNs.Comment: 28 pages including appendix. To appear at NeurIPS 202

    A Wasserstein distributionally robust planning model for renewable sources and energy storage systems under multiple uncertainties

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    Nowadays, electricity markets and carbon trading mechanisms can promote investment in renewable sources but also generate new uncertainties in decision-making. In this paper, a two-stage Wasserstein distributionally robust optimization (WDRO) model is presented to determine the optimal planning strategy for renewable energy generators (REGs) and energy storage systems (ESSs) in the distribution network. This model considers supply-side and demand-side uncertainties in the distribution network and the interaction uncertainty from the main grid which are depicted by the ambiguity sets based on the Wasserstein metric and historical data. Meanwhile, both 1-norm and -norm Wasserstein metric constraints are considered to satisfy the decision-makers different preference. Furthermore, to solve this WDRO model, a systematic solution method with a three-step process is developed. Numerical results from a modified IEEE 33-node system and a 130-node system in the real world demonstrate the advantages of the two-stage WDRO model and the effectiveness of the solution method.</p
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