3 research outputs found

    Introducing small storage capacity at residential PV installations to prevent overvoltages

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    Low voltage distribution feeders are designed for unidirectional energy supply from transformer to consumer. However, the implementation of small-scale PV production units on local utilities may result in bidirectional energy flows. The simultaneous power injection at sunny moments may cause a serious voltage rise along the feeder. These overvoltages may not only damage critical loads but also switches PV inverters off causing loss of green energy at the most productive moments. This paper presents a method to limit the voltage rise by introducing small battery buffers at local production sites. A smart inverter decides whether the PV energy is injected in the grid or buffered in the batteries. The relation between battery buffer size and overvoltage reduction is presented for a typical Belgian residential distribution feeder. The influence of the buffer along the feeder is calculated by working with synthetic load profiles and solar irradiation data

    An energy efficient breakdown cover service for electric cars

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    A typical breakdown cover service unit in Belgium has to assist up to 5 cars a day that end up with an empty fuel tank. As the range of today’s battery electric cars is lower than what people are used to have today, breakdown cover services expect that massive introduction of electric cars will lead to a multiple of EVs ending up with an empty battery. This paper reports about a research project, initiated by a Belgian breakdown cover service, that aimed to design and build a prototype of a fast and an energy efficient intervention car for EVs with empty batteries. For the prototype a CNG van is equipped with a hybrid power system enabling efficient energy injections for electric vehicles with slow as well as fast charging possibilities. The prototype is equipped with charging infrastructure providing mode 1, 2 and 3 charging. The paper starts with a description of the prototype design. The main part gives a detailed comparison of three EV breakdown cover service methods: towing the EV, energy injection on the spot by a diesel genset on a diesel truck and energy injection with the designed prototype. For a typical breakdown cover service day, the prototype turns out to be 12% faster, consumes 41% less energy and reduces emissions by 68% in comparison with towing.status: publishe

    Introducing small storage capacity at residential PV installations to prevent overvoltages

    No full text
    Low voltage distribution feeders are designed for unidirectional energy supply from transformer to consumer. However, the implementation of small-scale PV production units on local utilities may result in bidirectional energy flows. The simultaneous power injection at sunny moments may cause a serious voltage rise along the feeder. These overvoltages may not only damage critical loads but also switches PV inverters off causing loss of green energy at the most productive moments. This paper presents a method to limit the voltage rise by introducing small battery buffers at local production sites. A smart inverter decides whether the PV energy is injected in the grid or buffered in the batteries. The relation between battery buffer size and overvoltage reduction is presented for a typical Belgian residential distribution feeder. The influence of the buffer along the feeder is calculated by working with synthetic load profiles and solar irradiation data.status: publishe
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