Design optimization for reliability improvement in microgrids with wind – tidal – photovoltaic generation
Abstract:
Distributed generation is essential for smart distribution systems. This prospect mainly depends on the efficient use of renewable resources. Therefore, it is compelling to provide an optimum design framework that allows a thorough modeling to select the most convenient size, location, and renewable energy combination that maximize system reliability on a distribution network. This paper presents an optimization-based framework to design a distributed generation system by incorporating an optimal reliability assessment with wind, solar, and tidal energies. The network planning exercise considers the stochastic nature of the network's state by including time-series models and hourly-based analysis to accurately determine the reliability indexes. Historical meteorological data has been used to model and deploy a set of renewable energy distributed generators which maximize reliability in a 37-bus primary-distribution network. Due to the probabilistic modeling of the system's components, a Sequential Monte-Carlo simulation is used to manage reliability evaluation at the network level. Although large reductions on energy-not-supplied are expected, it is shown that cost and other performance indexes do not follow the same trend, and project selection requires some compromise between cost and performance.
Año de publicación:
2020
Keywords:
- Auto-regressive moving average models
- Monte carlo simulation
- distributed generation
- Optimal power system planning
Fuente:
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Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Energía renovable
- Energía
Áreas temáticas:
- Física aplicada
- Economía de la tierra y la energía