Abstract

Energy management in microgrids is typically formulated as an offline optimization problem for day-ahead scheduling by previous studies. Most of these offline approaches assume perfect forecasting of the renewables, the demands, and the market, which is difficult to achieve in practice. Existing online algorithms, on the other hand, oversimplify the microgrid model by only considering the aggregate supply-demand balance while omitting the underlying power distribution network and the associated power flow and system operational constraints. Consequently, such approaches may result in control decisions that violate the real-world constraints. This paper focuses on developing an online energy management strategy (EMS) for real-time operation of microgrids that takes into account the power flow and system operational constraints on a distribution network. We model the online energy management as a stochastic optimal power flow problem and propose an online EMS based on Lyapunov optimization. The proposed online EMS is subsequently applied to a real-microgrid system. The simulation results demonstrate that the performance of the proposed EMS exceeds a greedy algorithm and is close to an optimal offline algorithm. Lastly, the effect of the underlying network structure on energy management is observed and analyzed.

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