49 research outputs found

    Variability in large-scale wind power generation

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    The paper demonstrates the characteristics of wind power variability and net load variability in multiple power systems based on real data from multiple years. Demonstrated characteristics include probability distribution for different ramp durations, seasonal and diurnal variability and low net load events. The comparison shows regions with low variability (Sweden, Spain and Germany), medium variability (Portugal, Ireland, Finland and Denmark) and regions with higher variability (Quebec, Bonneville Power Administration and Electric Reliability Council of Texas in North America; Gansu, Jilin and Liaoning in China; and Norway and offshore wind power in Denmark). For regions with low variability, the maximum 1?h wind ramps are below 10% of nominal capacity, and for regions with high variability, they may be close to 30%. Wind power variability is mainly explained by the extent of geographical spread, but also higher capacity factor causes higher variability. It was also shown how wind power ramps are autocorrelated and dependent on the operating output level. When wind power was concentrated in smaller area, there were outliers with high changes in wind output, which were not present in large areas with well-dispersed wind power

    ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in chloroplasts of higher plants. Dependence on structural properties of the membranes

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    The ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in chloroplasts of higher plants is shown to be inhibited when the mobility of the protein complexes into the thylakoid membranes is reduced. Its occurrence also requires the presence of LHC complexes and the ability of the membranes to unstack. These observations, in addition to a slight increase of charge density of the surface-as indicated by 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and high salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence studies-and partial unstacking of the membranes-as monitored by digitonin method and 540 nm light scattering changes-after phosphorylation, suggest that the ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence could reflect some lateral redistribution of membrane proteins in the lipid matrix of the thylakoids. © 1983 Martinus Nijhoff/Dr W. Junk Publishers.SCOPUS: ar.jSCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Operating experience with a 30 MeV, 500 mu A H/sup -/ cyclotron

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    The prototype of a new design of H/sup -/ cyclotron for radioisotope production has been built in Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgium). After a brief description of the main design features, the paper describes the beam developments conducted since November 1986. After solving `vacuum runaway' and RF instabilities problems, extracted beam intensities up to 530 mu A have been achieved with the prototype. Low power consumption, high energy conversion efficiency, high reliability, automatic operation and low activation level have also been demonstrated on this prototype.Anglai

    Experience and Challenges With Short-Term Balancing in European Systems With Large Share of Wind Power

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    The amount of wind power in the world is quickly increasing. The background for this development is improved technology, decreased costs for the units, and increased concern regarding environmental problems of competing technologies such as fossil fuels. Some areas are starting to experience very high penetration levels of wind and there have been many instances when wind power has exceeded 50% of the electrical energy production in some balancing areas. The aims of this paper are to show the increased need for balancing, caused by wind power in the minutes to hourly time scale, and to show how this balancing has been performed in some systems when the wind share was higher than 50%. Experience has shown that this is possible, but that there are some challenges that have to be solved as the amount of wind power increases.Science Foundation IrelandDeposited by bulk impor

    Operating reserves and wind power integration : an international comparison

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    This paper provides a high-level international comparison of methods and key results from both operating practice and integration analysis, based on an informal International Energy Agency Task 25: Large-scale Wind Integration

    Optimal generation scheduling of wind-CSP systems in day-ahead electricity markets

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    This paper presents a coordination approach to maximize the total profit of wind power systems coordinated with concentrated solar power systems, having molten-salt thermal energy storage. Both systems are effectively handled by mixed-integer linear programming in the approach, allowing enhancement on the operational during non-insolation periods. Transmission grid constraints and technical operating constraints on both systems are modeled to enable a true management support for the integration of renewable energy sources in day-ahead electricity markets. A representative case study based on real systems is considered to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach. © IFIP International Federation for Information Processing 2015
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