Abstract

Due to the excessive increase in environmental costs of nonrenewable energy resources, there have been government legislation, policies, and new technologies to control carbon emissions. The increase in renewable resources requires new strategies for the operation and management of the electricity. This paper presents the power flow coloring system, which gives a unique ID to each power flow between a specific power source and a specific power load. It allows us to design multiple power flow patterns between distributed and fluctuating power sources and loads taking into account energy availability, cost, and carbon dioxide emission. For implementation, this paper proposes a cooperative distributed control method, where a master–slave role assignment scheme of power sources and a time-slot-based feedback control are introduced to cope with power fluctuations, while keeping the voltage stable. The experimental results clarify the practical feasibility of our proposed method in managing distributed fluctuating power sources and loads.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call