389 research outputs found
Short-Circuit Protection Schemes for LVDC Microgrids Based on the Combination of Hybrid Circuit Breakers and Mechanical Breakers
In recent years, low-voltage direct current (LVDC) microgrids are becoming more attractive because they represent a solution to integrate renewable sources, storage, and electronic loads bringing some advantages in comparison with traditional AC grids. However, the protection of such a network involves many challenges, especially in the case of LVDC microgrids with more than one feeder and multiple energy sources. Indeed, the traditional protection breakers used for an AC grid cannot isolate the faults and protect the components of a DC grid, while the use of solid-state circuit breakers increases energy losses. This paper deals with the analysis and design of the protection schemes for LVDC microgrids through the combination of mechanical circuit breakers and hybrid circuit breakers. This solution has the advantage of energy loss reduction but introduces further issues due to the slow transition times of the mechanical circuit breakers. Thus, a completely decentralized control system capable of overcoming the fast fault-clearing time, cost-effectiveness, and selectivity issues is designed to protect from pole-to-pole faults. The proposed control strategy is compared with a centralized protection scheme available in the literature through numerical simulation. The two algorithms show similar performances, with a mean voltage dip duration of less than 30 ms and a maximum voltage dip duration of about 100 ms in the most severe fault condition, but the proposed solution is more reliable and flexible since it does not depend on the communication system
A cellular automaton for the factor of safety field in landslides modeling
Landslide inventories show that the statistical distribution of the area of
recorded events is well described by a power law over a range of decades. To
understand these distributions, we consider a cellular automaton to model a
time and position dependent factor of safety. The model is able to reproduce
the complex structure of landslide distribution, as experimentally reported. In
particular, we investigate the role of the rate of change of the system
dynamical variables, induced by an external drive, on landslide modeling and
its implications on hazard assessment. As the rate is increased, the model has
a crossover from a critical regime with power-laws to non power-law behaviors.
We suggest that the detection of patterns of correlated domains in monitored
regions can be crucial to identify the response of the system to perturbations,
i.e., for hazard assessment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Finite driving rate and anisotropy effects in landslide modeling
In order to characterize landslide frequency-size distributions and
individuate hazard scenarios and their possible precursors, we investigate a
cellular automaton where the effects of a finite driving rate and the
anisotropy are taken into account. The model is able to reproduce observed
features of landslide events, such as power-law distributions, as
experimentally reported. We analyze the key role of the driving rate and show
that, as it is increased, a crossover from power-law to non power-law behaviors
occurs. Finally, a systematic investigation of the model on varying its
anisotropy factors is performed and the full diagram of its dynamical behaviors
is presented.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Comprehensive Overview on HVDC Converter Transformer Design: Additional Discussions to the IEC/IEEE 60076-57-129 Standard
HVDC has been chosen as an economical and technical solution for power transmission through long distances, asynchronous interconnections and long submarine cables crossing. Despite DC transmission benefits to power systems, the converters non-linearity produces undesirable effects to the converter transformer in service, mainly listed in the technical standard IEC/IEEE 60076-57-129. However, additional discussions and complementary information can be found in a plurality of references, which are brought in the article under a comprehensive overview perspective. Some design solutions deal with these effects increasing the technical margins, which have direct influence on manufacturing costs and transformer reliability and availability levels. This article goes through the main topics pointed by the standard and the references, investigating their consequences in the converter transformer operation, in order to provide a comprehensive tutorial on design solutions and considerations to deal with those undesirable effects
Perosomus elumbis in piglets: Pathological, radiological and cytogenetic findings
Perosomus elumbis (PE) is a rare congenital condition characterized by agenesis of the lumbar, sacral and coccygeal vertebrae. Perosomus elumbis has rarely been reported in literature as morphological description of singles or few cases. Here we report the first extensive description of eight cases of PE detected in two consecutive litters from the same parents of Casertana pig breed. In August 2018, eight piglets were investigated for multiple malformations. All malformed animals, but one, died in the first day of life. The survivor piglet died at 23 days of age. Pathological, radiological and cytogenetic examination was performed. Furthermore, a farm epidemiological investigation was carried out to investigate the percentage of piglets born dead or with malformations in 2018. The radiological and pathological exams showed skeletal abnormalities at the spinal cord level and visceral malformations. Cytogenetic investigations showed a normal chromosome arrangement. Finally, epidemiological investigation revealed a low prevalence of malformations in newborn pigs, equal to 0.5% of the total birth rate of the farm. Our findings report the first extensive description of PE cases in pigs and suggest an underestimation of this malformation in veterinary medicine. Our findings also suggest a specific genetic etiological basis as cause of PE in pigs and exclude chromosomal abnormalities. Further studies will be performed to confirm this hypothesis
The economic feasibility of a floating offshore wind energy farm considering different steel prices. The case of study of the Canary Islands
The objective of this work is to calculate the Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE), Net Present Value (NPV) and the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) of a 700MW floating wind farm located in the Canary Islands. For this, three possible scenarios have been analyzed taking into account the price of steel and each of the economic parameters have been calculated for each of the scenarios, showing that the highest economic variations are related to the IRR and LCOE
Electron-phonon effects and transport in carbon nanotubes
We calculate the electron-phonon scattering and binding in semiconducting
carbon nanotubes, within a tight binding model. The mobility is derived using a
multi-band Boltzmann treatment. At high fields, the dominant scattering is
inter-band scattering by LO phonons corresponding to the corners K of the
graphene Brillouin zone. The drift velocity saturates at approximately half the
graphene Fermi velocity. The calculated mobility as a function of temperature,
electric field, and nanotube chirality are well reproduced by a simple
interpolation formula. Polaronic binding give a band-gap renormalization of ~70
meV, an order of magnitude larger than expected. Coherence lengths can be quite
long but are strongly energy dependent.Comment: 5 pages and 4 figure
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