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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A Bio-Inspired Multi-Agent System Framework for Real-Time Load Management in All-Electric Ship Power Systems

Feng, Xianyong 2012 May 1900 (has links)
All-electric ship power systems have limited generation capacity and finite rotating inertia compared with large power systems. Moreover, all-electric ship power systems include large portions of nonlinear loads and dynamic loads relative to the total power capacity, which may significantly reduce the stability margin. Pulse loads and other high-energy weapon loads in the system draw a large amount of power intermittently, which may cause significant frequency and voltage oscillations in the system. Thus, an effective real-time load management technique is needed to dynamically balance the load and generation to operate the system normally. Multi-agent systems, inspired by biological phenomena, aim to cooperatively achieve system objectives that are difficult to reach by a single agent or centralized controller. Since power systems include various electrical components with different dynamical systems, conventional homogeneous multi-agent system cooperative controllers have difficulties solving the real-time load management problem with heterogeneous agents. In this dissertation, a novel heterogeneous multi-agent system cooperative control methodology is presented based on artificial potential functions and reduced-order agent models to cooperatively achieve real-time load management for all-electric ship power systems. The technique integrates high-order system dynamics and various kinds of operational constraints into the multi-agent system, which improves the accuracy of the cooperative controller. The multi-agent system includes a MVAC multiagent system and a DC zone multi-agent, which are coordinated by an AC-DC communication agent. The developed multi-agent system framework and the notional all-electric ship power system model were simulated in PSCAD software. Case studies and performance analysis of the MVAC multi-agent system and the DC zone multi-agent system were performed. The simulation results indicated that propulsion loads and pulse loads can be successfully coordinated to reduce the impact of pulse loads on the power quality of all-electric ship power systems. Further, the switch status or power set-point of loads in DC zones can be optimally determined to dynamically balance the generation and load while satisfying the operational constraints of the system and considering load priorities. The method has great potential to be extended to other isolated power systems, such as microgrids.
2

On-ship Power Management and Voyage Planning Interaction

Frisk, Mikael January 2015 (has links)
Voyage planning methods have advanced significantly in recent years to take advantage of the increasingly available computing power. With the aid of detailed weather predictions it is now possible to decide a route that is optimized with respect to some criterion. With the introduction of so called All Electric Ships; ships with diesel electric propulsion, varying the power production in order to adjust the propulsion has become easier. Incorporating a power management system with the voyage planning software on a ship allows for different techniques to reduce fuel consumption. In this thesis, three different approaches are developed, compared and combined. The first method handles the task of how to optimally share a load demand across a set of generators. The second is performing power production scheduling with respect to engine efficiencies, and finally in the third the potential in energy storage integration with the power management system is investigated. From the results, it is argued that the largest potential lies in the first approach where large fuel savings can be made without any large risk. The second approach shows potential for fuel reduction but this however is found to be heavily dependent on weather predictions and accuracy of the used models. Regarding energy storage it is found that while it is not economically feasible to increase the fuel efficiency, energy storage can be used to handle load transients and fulfil power redundancy requirements.
3

Thermal-electrical co-simulation of shipboard integrated power systems on an all-electric ship

Pruske, Matthew Andrew 2009 August 1900 (has links)
The goal of the work reported herein has been to model aspects of the electrical distribution system of an all-electric ship (AES) and to couple electrical load behavior with the thermal management network aboard the ship. The development of a thermally dependent electrical network has built upon an in-house thermal management simulation environment to replace the existing steady state heat loads with dynamic, thermally dependent, electrical heat loads. Quantifying the close relationship between thermal and electrical systems is of fundamental importance in a large, integrated system like the AES. This in-house thermal management environment, called the Dynamic Thermal Modeling and Simulation (DTMS) framework, provided the fundamental capabilities for modeling thermal systems and subsystems relevant to the AES. The motivation behind the initial work on DTMS was to understand the dynamics of thermal management aboard the ship. The first version, developed in 2007, captured the fundamental aspects of system-level thermal management while maintaining modularity and allowing for further development into other energy domains. The reconfigurable nature of the DTMS framework allowed for the expansion into the electrical domain with the creation of an electrical distribution network in support of thermal simulations. The dynamics of the electrical distribution system of the AES were captured using reconfigurable and physics-based circuit elements that allow for thermal feedback to affect the behavior of the system. Following the creation of the electrical network, subsystems and systems were created to simulate electrical distribution. Then, again using the modularity features of DTMS, a thermal resistive heat flow network was created to capture the transient behavior of heat flow from the electrical network to the existing thermal management framework. This network provides the intimate link between the thermal management framework and the electrical distribution system. Finally, the three frameworks (electrical, thermal resistive, and thermal management) were combined to quantify the impact that each system has relative to system-level operation. Simulations provide an indication of the unlimited configurations and potential design space a user of DTMS can explore to explore the design of an AES. / text
4

A classifier-guided sampling method for early-stage design of shipboard energy systems

Backlund, Peter Bond 26 February 2013 (has links)
The United States Navy is committed to developing technology for an All-Electric Ship (AES) that promises to improve the affordability and capability of its next-generation warships. With the addition of power-intensive 21st century electrical systems, future thermal loads are projected to exceed current heat removal capacity. Furthermore, rising fuel costs necessitate a careful approach to total-ship energy management. Accordingly, the aim of this research is to develop computer tools for early-stage design of shipboard energy distribution systems. A system-level model is developed that enables ship designers to assess the effects of thermal and electrical system configurations on fuel efficiency and survivability. System-level optimization and design exploration, based on these energy system models, is challenging because the models are sometimes computationally expensive and characterized by discrete design variables and discontinuous responses. To address this challenge, a classifier-guided sampling (CGS) method is developed that uses a Bayesian classifier to pursue solutions with desirable performance characteristics. The CGS method is tested on a set of example problems and applied to the AES energy system model. Results show that the CGS method significantly improves the rate of convergence towards known global optima, on average, when compared to genetic algorithms. / text
5

Voltage Stability in an Electric Propulsion System for Ships

Nord, Thomas January 2006 (has links)
This Master of Science thesis was written based on the shipbuilder Kockums AB feasibility study regarding the development of an All- Electric Ship for the Swedish Navy. The thesis was aiming at addressing voltage stability issues in a dc system fed by PWM rectifiers operating in parallel when supplying constant power loads. A basic computer model was developed for investigating the influence from various parameters on the system. It was shown that the voltage stability is dependent upon the ability to store energy in large capacitors. It was also shown that a voltage droop must be implemented maintaining load sharing within acceptable limits. Different cases of operation were modelled, faults were discussed, and the principal behaviour of the system during a short-circuit was investigated. It was shown that the short-circuit current is much more limited in this type of system in comparison to an ac system. It was concluded that more research and development regarding the components of the system must be performed.

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