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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

Energy storage in the future smart grid. An investigation of pricing strategies and dynamic load levelling for efficient integration of domestic energy storage within a virtual power plant and its evaluation using a genetic algorithm optimization platform

Okpako, Oghenovo January 2019 (has links)
One feature that is hoped for in the smart grid is the participation of energy prosumers in a power market through demand response program. In this work, we consider a third-party virtual power plant (VPP) that has “real-time” control over a number of prosumers’ storage units within an envisaged free market. Typically, a VPP with domestic energy storage will involve a bidirectional flow of energy, where energy can either flow from the grid to the prosumers’ battery or from the prosumers’ battery to the grid. Such a system requires prices to be set correctly in order to meet the market objectives of all the VPP stakeholders (VPP Aggregator, prosumers, and grid). Previous work has shown how VPPs could operate, and the benefits of using energy storage, coupled with pricing, in terms of reducing energy cost for stakeholders and providing the grid with its required load shape. The published work either assumes prices or costs or then optimises for least cost within the grid parameters i.e. losses, voltage limits, etc. However, the setting of prices in such a way that energy can be traded among VPP stakeholders that satisfies all stakeholders’ objectives has not been fully explored in the literature, particularly with real-time VPP aggregators. In this thesis, we present novel strategies for evaluating and setting the prices of a community VPP with domestic storage based on the bidirectional flow of energy through the VPP aggregator between the grid and the prosumers that mutually meet all VPP stakeholders’ objectives. This showed that depending on pricing and the VPP objectives, demand-side management could be attractive. However, the effect on the grid in terms of the load was not what was desired. A new performance index called the “Cumulative Performance Index” CPI is proposed to measure the VPP’s performance. Using the CPI, it was possible to compare and contrast between the VPP technical performance and its business case for stakeholders. Optimizing with respect to the grid’s requirement for DSM from the VPP, it was possible to achieve a CPI of 100%. This work was implemented using a novel approach on a genetic algorithm platform. / Niger Delta Development Commission of Nigeria

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