Abstract

In past decades, the deployment of renewable-energy-based power generators, namely solar photovoltaic (PV) power generators, has been projected to cause a number of new difficulties in planning, monitoring, and control of power distribution grids. In this paper, a control scheme for flexible asset management is proposed with the aim of closing the gap between power supply and demand in a suburban low-voltage power distribution grid with significant penetration of solar PV power generation while respecting the different systems’ operational constraints, in addition to the voltage constraints prescribed by the French distribution grid operator (ENEDIS). The premise of the proposed strategy is the use of a model-based predictive control (MPC) scheme. The flexible assets used in the case study are a biogas plant and a water tower. The mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP) setting due to the water tower ON/OFF controller greatly increases the computational complexity of the optimisation problem. Thus, one of the contributions of the paper is a new formulation that solves the MINLP problem as a smooth continuous one without having recourse to relaxation. To determine the most adequate size for the proposed scheme’s sliding window, a sensitivity analysis is carried out. Then, results given by the scheme using the previously determined window size are analysed and compared to two reference strategies based on a relaxed problem formulation: a single optimisation yielding a weekly operation planning and a MPC scheme. The proposed problem formulation proves effective in terms of performance and maintenance of acceptable computational complexity. For the chosen sliding window, the control scheme drives the power supply/demand gap down from the initial one up to 38%.

Highlights

  • Solar PV power generation is inferred from global horizontal irradiance (GHI) measurements taken by a pyranometer installed at PROMES-CNRS, located just a few kilometres from the residential neighbourhood

  • The mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP) setting due to the water tower ON/OFF controller greatly increases the computational complexity of the optimisation problem

  • A simulated case study is carried out on a residential neighbourhood located in the Occitania region

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Summary

Introduction

The deployment of distributed generators results in bidirectional power flow [2] and is projected to worsen voltage fluctuations and increase the risk of power backflow from low-voltage power distribution grids to medium-voltage ones. This is mainly due to wind and solar, which are intermittent energy sources depending on geographical locations and weather conditions [3]. Deployment of distributed generators is expected to make compliance with such constraints increasingly difficult It triggers plenty of safety and quality issues, including short-circuits, power outages, and equipment damage [5,6]. The penetration of distributed generation into power distribution grids is behind planning, legal, and regulatory issues [7]

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