3,901 research outputs found
The role of large-scale energy storage design and dispatch in the power grid: A study of very high grid penetration of variable renewable resources
We present a result of hourly simulation performed using hourly load data and the corresponding simulated output of wind and solar technologies distributed throughout the state of California. We examined how we could achieve very high-energy penetration from intermittent renewable system into the electricity grid. This study shows that the maximum threshold for the storage need is significantly less than the daily average demand. In the present study, we found that the approximate network energy storage is of the order of 186. GW. h/22. GW (approximately 22% of the average daily demands of California). Allowing energy dumping was shown to increase storage use, and by that way, increases grid penetration and reduces the required backup conventional capacity requirements. Using the 186. GW. h/22. GW storage and at 20% total energy loss, grid penetration was increased to approximately 85% of the annual demand of the year while also reducing the conventional backup capacity requirement to 35. GW. This capacity was sufficient to supply the year round hourly demand, including 59 GW peak demand, plus a distribution loss of about 5.3%. We conclude that designing an efficient and least cost grid may require the capability to capture diverse physical and operational policy scenarios of the future grid. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd
First Principles LCGO Calculation of the Magneto-optical Properties of Nickel and Iron
We report a first principles, self-consistent, all electron, linear
combination of Gaussian orbitals (LCGO) calculation of a comprehensive
collection of magneto-optical properties of nickel and iron based on density
functional theory. Among the many magneto-optical effects, we have studied the
equatorial Kerr effect for absorption in the optical as well as soft X-ray
region, where it is called X-ray magnetic linear dichroism (X-MLD). In the
optical region the effect is of the order of 2\% while in the X-ray region it
is of the order of 1\% for the incident angles considered. In addition, the
polar Kerr effect, X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (X-MCD) and total X-ray
absorption at the L edges, soft X-ray Faraday effect at the L
edges have also been calculated. Our results are in good agreement with
experiments and other first principles methods that have been used to calculate
some of these properties.Comment: 22 pages RevTex. 8 figures submitted separately as a uuencoded,
compressed tar fil
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Distributed Resources Shift Paradigms on Power System Design, Planning, and Operation: An Application of the GAP Model
Power systems have evolved following a century-old paradigm of planning and operating a grid based on large central generation plants connected to load centers through a transmission grid and distribution lines with radial flows. This paradigm is being challenged by the development and diffusion of modular generation and storage technologies. We use a novel approach to assess the sequencing and pacing of centralized, distributed, and off-grid electrification strategies by developing and employing the grid and access planning (GAP) model. GAP is a capacity expansion model to jointly assess operation and investment in utility-scale generation, transmission, distribution, and demand-side resources. This paper conceptually studies the investment and operation decisions for a power system with and without distributed resources. Contrary to the current practice, we find hybrid systems that pair grid connections with distributed energy resources (DERs) are the preferred mode of electricity supply for greenfield expansion under conservative reductions in photovoltaic panel (PV) and energy storage prices. We also find that when distributed PV and storage are employed in power system expansion, there are savings of 15%-20% mostly in capital deferment and reduced diesel use. Results show that enhanced financing mechanisms for DER PV and storage could enable 50%-60% of additional deployment and save 15 /MWh in system costs. These results have important implications to reform current utility business models in developed power systems and to guide the development of electrification strategies in underdeveloped grids
The U(1)-Higgs Model: Critical Behaviour in the Confinig-Higgs region
We study numerically the critical properties of the U(1)-Higgs lattice model,
with fixed Higgs modulus, in the region of small gauge coupling where the Higgs
and Confining phases merge. We find evidence of a first order transition line
that ends in a second order point. By means of a rotation in parameter space we
introduce thermodynamic magnitudes and critical exponents in close resemblance
with simple models that show analogous critical behaviour. The measured data
allow us to fit the critical exponents finding values in agreement with the
mean field prediction. The location of the critical point and the slope of the
first order line are accurately given.Comment: 21 text pages. 12 postscript figures available on reques
The "DeMAND" coding scheme: A "common language" for representing and analyzing student discourse
Binding of Holes to Magnetic Impurities in a Strongly Correlated System
The effect of a magnetic (S=1/2) impurity coupled to a 2D system of
correlated electrons (described by the t--J model) is studied by exact
diagonalisations. It is found that, if the exchange coupling of the impurity
with the neighboring spins is ferromagnetic or weakly antiferromagnetic, an
extra hole can form bound states of different spatial symmetries with the
impurity extending to a few lattice spacings. The binding energy is maximum
when the impurity is completely decoupled (vacancy) and vanishes for an
antiferromagnetic coupling exceeding . Several peaks appear in the
single hole spectral function below the lower edge of the quasiparticle band as
signatures of the d-, s- and p-wave boundstates.Comment: Latex 11 pages, postscript files in uuencoded form, report#
LPQTH-94/
Spectral bounds for the Hellmann potential
The method of potential envelopes is used to analyse the bound state spectrum
of the Schroedinger Hamiltonian H=-\Delta+V(r), where the Hellmann potential is
given by V(r) = -A/r + Be^{-Cr}/r, A and C are positive, and B can be positive
or negative. We established simple formulas yielding upper and lower bounds for
all the energy eigenvalues.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, typos correcte
Comment on "Breakdown of the Internet under Intentional Attack"
We obtain the exact position of the percolation threshold in intentionally
damaged scale-free networks.Comment: 1 page, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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