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Solar Forecasting and Integration for Operation and Control in Power Systems

The use of renewable energy and specifically solar energy in power systems is rapidly increasing due to significantly lower carbon emissions and low energy costs. Although the widespread use of renewable energy generation provides many benefits to the power system, high levels of renewable energy generation introduce several new challenges to the power system operation. The high level of uncertainty associated with solar power output complicates operation and planning decisions for the power system. Therefore, accurate and reliable solar power forecasts are needed for the planning and operation of the power system more than ever before. This thesis first focuses on improving probabilistic solar power forecasts that provide detailed information on the uncertainty of the forecasts. The proposed copula-based Bayesian method utilizes the underlying relation between temperature and solar power output to improve forecast accuracy and performance. The results show significant improvement compared to the direct use of temperature as an input to the forecast model. Secondly, a novel improvement is made to the State Frequency Memory (SFM) method for solar forecasting. The SFM model, which is based on the Long Short Term Memory (LSTM) method, incorporates the patterns in the frequency domain on top of the time domain considerations. The SFM model is improved by frequency band selection based on the Fourier transform of the solar power data. The improved SFM model is able to include the low-frequency patterns in solar data compared to the sampling frequency of second and minute-level and significantly improve results in very short-term forecasting. Thirdly, One of the challenges that arise from high penetration of solar power is investigated further. An essential part of power system operation is maintaining the balance between generation and loads in the power system. The intermittency of solar power makes it very challenging for the operators to maintain the balance and increases the need for spinning reserves in the power system. In this thesis, solar forecasts are used in a multistep optimization model to control energy storage and electric vehicle charging to minimize violations from the ramp rate limits of the system. A detailed analysis of forecast error is performed to tackle the trade-off between longer forecast horizons and increasing forecast error and find the optimal forecast horizon for predictive solar power smoothing.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ucf.edu/oai:stars.library.ucf.edu:etd2020-2922
Date01 January 2023
CreatorsPanamtash, Hossein
PublisherSTARS
Source SetsUniversity of Central Florida
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceElectronic Theses and Dissertations, 2020-

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