This invention relates generally to power distribution systems, and more particularly to reducing substation demand fluctuations using decoupled price schemes for demand response.
Power system operators are responsible for maintaining an instantaneous and continuous balance between supply and demand of power at transmission substations. This task is complicated by the increased presence of distributed energy resources (DERs), such as wind and solar generation, in the distribution system, which are fed by transmission substations. The unpredictable nature of these renewable energy sources leads to greater fluctuations in the amount of generated power available. Such fluctuations in generation capacity are present in addition to fluctuations in power demand.
To achieve a power balance in the presence of heightened volatility of energy resources, operators increase the use of reserve capacities, which are able to operate in load flowing mode. However, increasing power production by reserve units comes at the cost of reducing power production by more energy-efficient base-load generation units, reducing the environmental benefits of using renewable DERs.
Rather than relying on reserve units to act in load-following mode, there has been much interest on the topic of demand response, which adjusts loads in order to smooth out volatility in renewable generation capacity and power demand.
A variety of methods are known for reducing the load demands at specific periods through implementing demand response programs. For example, US 20110066300 provides a method for controlling load in a utility distribution network that initiates a shed event for a node in the distribution network by selecting premises associated with the node that are participating in a demand response program to reduce the load at the node to desired levels.
US 20100211443 utilizes demand response to reduce energy consumption by individual consumers by aggregating individual consumers, and providing feedback to such consumers regarding their energy consumption relative to other energy consumers in a group.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,068,938 describes a method for managing electrical demand on a power grid in response to electrical supply conditions which includes determining a first energy demand forecast using stored information, determining a first energy supply forecast based on a known energy production and transmission capacity, and comparing the first energy demand forecast to the first energy supply forecast. The method also includes transmitting at least one of an adjusted price signal and an electrical load shedding signal to a customer over a bi-directional communication system based on the comparison of the first energy demand forecast to the first energy supply forecast.
US 20020138176 provides means and methods for the automated aggregation and management of distributed electric load reduction. US 20090187499 provides a system, method and computer program product for providing demand response in a power grid. In one embodiment, the computer system can include a first module configured to store user profile data for a plurality of users in memory and wherein user profile data includes load shed participation data for at least some of the plurality of users, information identifying one or more load control devices associated with each of the plurality of users, and location data of a premises associated with the user. The system can include a second module configured to select a multitude of the users based, at least in part, on the load shed participation data of the profile data, a third module configured to transmit a first control message to a load control device of the selected users, wherein the control message comprises a request to reduce a load.
Most of existing methods are focused on how to reduce the peak demands and do not address how to smoothen the aggregated load curve at the substations to reduce the usage of reserve units. Therefore, there is a need for developing effective mechanism or techniques to reduce the substation load fluctuations.
Ideally, power generation, as a function of time, evolves smoothly. However, with increasing use of distributed generation sources, generation capacity fluctuations have significantly increased the volatility of substation demands. Instead of trying to control generation in order to smooth out this volatility, this invention uses a generation following mechanism to smooth fluctuations in substation demand, that is, the invention encourages a scheduling of flexible loads that closely follows variations in renewable generation. Under such a scheme, the transmission system is able to better utilize base-load generation units and operate at increased efficiency, and the distribution system is able to maximally utilize the renewable resources.
In particular, the embodiments of the invention decouple a substation price model with separate components for the base-load unit power production cost from the reserve unit power production cost, and the product cost of reserve units is further decoupled into total reserve usage cost and reserve usage variation cost between current and previous purchase intervals. Unlike conventional pricing models, which consider a single cost component, the result of using a decoupled pricing scheme is that in some cases it is favorable to increase demand in order to lower power costs at the substation. For example, when power demand is below a normal operating range, it can be financially advantageous to increase power demand, instead of using reserve units to achieve power balance.
In other cases, it is favorable to less variation of reserve usages between consecutive purchase intervals. For example, the product cost will be less if the amount of reserve usage at current purchase interval is close to usages at previous purchase interval. An important feature of the pricing scheme is that it depends on the total power purchased, and the amount of change in requested power compared to previous purchase intervals.
The operator can adjust the values of each component to achieve a desired aggregated demand profile for each substation if the demand fluctuations re beyond a pre-determined expectation. For example, if the aggregated demand profile is above a tolerated limit, then the operator can increase the up reserve price or/and lower upper normal threshold to pull demand back to or below the limit. Meanwhile, if the up reserves are changing more frequently or significantly among pricing intervals than expected, then the operator can increase the up reserve variation price to slow down or reduce the variations. In contract, the operator can increase the down reserve price or/and increase lower normal threshold to pull demand up to or above a tolerated limit if the aggregated demand profile is below the limit. When the down reserves are changing more frequently or significantly than expected, the operator can increase the down reserve variation price to slow down or reduce the variations.
In the invention, an optimization program is formulated to determine the optimal scheduling of flexible loads under decoupled prices for power purchase at substation subject to power flow, power balance, and other technical constraints. Both real-time and day-head markets are considered. The optimization problem formulation is solvable by computationally efficient linear programming methods.
The embodiments of the invention provide a method for reducing substation demand fluctuations using decoupled price schemes of demand response. In particular, the embodiments of the invention decouple a substation price model with separate components for the base-load unit power production cost from the reserve unit power production cost.
Distribution System Modeling
The method can be used in power distribution systems with significant renewable generations.
A typical power distribution system is usually radial-configured, and its loads, branches or generations can be three-phase unbalanced. Therefore, each phase separately models during its operation and control. For example, the line between bus 136 and bus 138 only has two phases, phase B and phase C. Meanwhile, the line between bus 134 and bus 144 has only one phase A.
The loads can be connected to a bus either using DELTA-connection or WYE-connection, and each load can contain constant-power components, constant-current components, and constant-impedance components. There are three different types of loads for WYE-connected loads, including constant impedance Y-Z, constant power Y-PQ and constant current Y-I. Similarly, there are also three different types for DELTA-connected loads, including constant impedance D-Z, constant current D-I, and constant power D-PQ.
In
The DELTA-connected loads are converted to equivalent WYE-connected ones. For example, for a load between phase x and phase y, PD
PD
PD
where βD+ and βD− are conversion factors based on the load's power factor and ideal voltage relationship between three phases as follows:
The equivalent load demands for any phase x that connected with both WYE-connected and DELTA-connected loads, PEQD
PEQD
where PD
The renewable generations can also be connected to a bus either using DELTA-connection or WYE-connection, and each generation can be regulated as constant active power and reactive power mode, or constant active power and constant voltage magnitude mode. In this invention, all generations are treated as constant active power and reactive power mode.
Similarly, DELTA-connected generations can be converted to equivalent WYE-connected ones as well. For example, for a generation between phase x and phase y, PG
PG
PG
where βG+ and β− are conversion factors based on the generation's power factor and ideal voltage relationship between three phases as follows:
The power supply comes from the power injected by the transmission system at the substation and distributed generation sources at various locations in the power distribution system. In this invention, the renewable resources are fully utilized, unless there is network congestion, and there is a penalty for the unused amount of available renewable generations. The flexibility provided by the loads is optimally used to follow the changes of renewable generation to reduce the aggregated demand fluctuations at the substation. Both the day-ahead and real-time problems are described.
Various characterizations of loads are considered depending on their flexibility in terms of changing how their demand is met. A load that can be removed partially or completely with a penalty cost is called a removable load. A load that can be reduced with inconvenience cost is called a reducible load. A load that can be deferred to a later time, or advanced to an earlier time is called a transferrable load. A load that is not available for demand response is called a fixed load that needs to be serviced immediately. In
Under a demand response scheme, a distribution system operator (DSO) can determine how to lower reducible loads, drop removable loads, and schedule transferrable loads in order to maintain smoother operations with respect to achieving power balance. Under different demand response scenarios, different values of power needed to be drawn at the substation level. There is a cost associated with drawing power at the substation level.
As shown in
Since the production and reserve costs are given as three separate components, they are referred to a decoupled pricing scheme. The result of using the decoupled pricing scheme is that it is favorable to less reserve usage and less reverse usage variation. The pricing structure enables one to find demand response solutions that take advantage of this property.
Besides the above cost consideration, the distribution operation also requires that the system must be secure, that is the power flows on each branch of the system must be within its capacity. In this invention, the power flow of a power distribution system is modeled using a network flow model in which each phase of a bus is treated as an independent node, and each phase of a branch is treated as a losses branch with its flow only limited by its capacity. For a radial system, the active power flow can be easily determined after the load demands and renewable generations are given through a backward sweep procedure in which the active power flow on a phase of upstream branch is determined as the difference between the summation of all renewable generations on the phase downstream to the branch, and the summation of all load demands on the phase downstream to the branch.
B. Optimal Day-Ahead Operation Model
The schedule period of a day-ahead operation model is 24 hours. It includes several pricing intervals, and each pricing interval also includes several load and generation forecasting interval. The purpose of day-ahead model is to determine the operation schedule for each load and generation forecasting intervals with given prices for all pricing intervals of the next schedule period, i.e., 24 hours. It is assumed that the day-ahead prices are given at intervals, such as one hour, and the load and renewable forecasts given at relatively shorter intervals, such as 15 minutes. Therefore, each pricing interval contains multiple forecasting intervals. For example, prices and forecasts given at interval of 60 and 15 minutes, the day-ahead model will determine the generation and load control schedule for total of 96 15-minute-intervals.
The objective of the day-ahead model is to minimize the summation of purchase cost at the substation CSDA, available but unused renewable cost CRDA, demand response and power removing cost CDDA for all forecasting intervals:
Minimize CSDA+CRDA+CDDA. (6)
Assume H is the set of day-ahead pricing intervals, Qh is the set of day-ahead scheduling interval for each pricing interval h, and ΦY is the set of energized phases for WYE-connected generations or loads in the system, the substation purchase cost can be determined either as Eq. (7) if up and down reserve cost are given in term of consumed energy, or Eq. (8) if up and down reserve cost are given in term of used capacity:
wherein αq is the ratio of length of scheduling/forecasting interval over length of pricing interval, PS
PS
PS
wherein
CS
The prices are given per phase, and phase balancing can be managed through price signals.
Ignoring the operation cost for renewable, the renewable cost only includes the penalty for the available but unused energy:
wherein ΦD is the set of energized phase pairs of DELTA-connected generations or loads in the system, DG is the set of distributed renewable generations, PG
Neglecting the cost for managing the transferrable loads, the cost for flexible load control include inconvenience cost for responsive loads to voluntarily reduce its demand, and penalty cost for removable loads to shut off its power supply:
LDR and LDM are the set of reducible loads and removable loads. PD
CD
The power balances for all energized phases in the system are taken as the constraints. For each phase x at interval q, the system power balance equation can be described as:
wherein LDF and LDT are the sets of fixed and transferrable loads, and TFq is the set of intervals that transferrable loads at other intervals can be deferred or advanced to interval q. PEQG
For transferable loads, power consumptions can be increased during the transferring. The energy balances among recovering periods for each load are defined as Eq. (15) for WYE-connected loads, or Eq. (16) for DELTA-connected loads:
where PD
The available but unused energy for a renewable is constrained by the available renewable output:
∀g∈DG,q∈Qh,h∈H:
PG
PG
wherein PG
The constraints for allowed reduced and removed loads are defined as:
PD
PD
∀d∈LDM,q∈Qh,h∈H:
PD
PD
where ρd,q,xRD and ρd,q,xyRD are the maximum ratio of voluntarily load reductions for WYE-connected loads at phase x and DELTA-connected loads between phase x and phase y, ρd,q,xRM and ρd,q,xyRM are the maximum ratio of forced removed loads for WYE-connected loads at phase x and DELTA-connected loads between phase x and phase y.
Considering the complexity and dimension of the system, only the power flow limits for overloaded branches for the specific occurring phases and moments are considered. For any branch between bus i and bus j, its power flow can be determined as the sum of power injections for all buses upstream to its upstream bus, or downstream to its downstream bus. Accordingly, the power flow limits are described as:
∀(i,j)∈DEVOV,q∈QhOV,h∈HOV,x∈ΦYOV;
−
−
where BUSij-DN and BUSij-UP are the sets of buses upstream to the upstream bus of the branch between bus i and j, and downstream to downstream bus of the branch. DEVOV, QhOV, HOV and ΦYOV are the sets of overloaded branches, scheduling intervals, pricing intervals, and phases.
δBUS
In order to efficiently solve the above optimization problem, a candidate solution is initially set omitting the power flow limit constraints in (19). After this candidate solution is obtained, the power flow is calculated using the backward sweep method for radial power distribution systems mentioned above. If overloaded branches are present, the problem is resolved using power flow limit constraints on those overloaded branches, yielding a new solution. The process is repeated until a solution is obtained without any overloaded branches.
C. Optimal Real-Time Operation Model
The schedule period of a real-time operation model is less than an hour, such 15 minutes. It includes several pricing intervals, and each pricing interval also includes several load and generation forecasting intervals. The purpose of the real-time model is to determine the dispatch scheme for all load/generation forecasting intervals with given prices for all pricing intervals within next real-time schedule period. If the real-time prices are given at a small interval, such as 15 minutes, then the load and renewable forecasts can be given at much shorter intervals, such as 3 minutes. Therefore, the real-time model for 1 real-time pricing interval can include 5 real-time forecast intervals.
Similar to the day-ahead model, the objective to be minimized for a real-time model includes substation purchase cost, CSRT, unused renewable cost, CRRT, and demand control cost, CDRT:
Minimize CSRT+CRRT+CDRT. (21)
The substation power purchase cost for a real-time pricing interval is given by Eq. (22) when prices are given in term of energy, or (23) when prices are given in terms of capacity:
where, Q and Tq are the set of real-time pricing intervals, and the set of real-time forecasting intervals for pricing interval q. αt is the ratio of length of forecast interval t over length of pricing interval. CS
PS
PS
where ΔPS
CS
The renewable and demand control costs are defined as:
PG
The real-time model considers the nodal power balance equations as its constraints. For any node i, the power balance equation is defined as follows:
where, δi is 0-1 variable, and equals to 1 when the substation is located at bus i, DGi, LDRi, LDMi, LDTi, and LDFi are the sets of renewable, reducible loads, removable loads, transferrable loads and fixed loads at bus i. TFt is the set of intervals that transferrable loads at other intervals can be deferred or advanced to interval t. BUSi is the set of buses connected with bus i. PEQG
∀ij∈DEV,t∈Tq,q∈Q,x∈ΦY:
−
DEV is the set of branches in the system.
The unused energy for a renewable is constrained by is the available renewable output as:
∀g∈DG,t∈Tq,q∈Q:
PG
PG
wherein PG
The constraints for allowed voluntarily reduced and forced removed loads are defined as:
∀d∈LDR,t∈Tq,q∈Q:
PD
PD
∀d∈LDM,t∈Tq,q∈Q:
PD
PD
where ρd,t,xRD and ρd,t,xyRD, ρd,t,xRM and ρd,t,xyRM are the maximum ratio of voluntarily load reduction and forced removed loads for WYE and DELTA connected load d at interval t and phase x or between phase x and y.
For transferable loads, the energy balances among recovering periods for each load should be maintained:
where PD
D. Procedure for Managing Flexible Loads Using Decoupled Price Model
In step 410, decoupled price components for a substation of the power distribution system are specified for all pricing intervals of a next scheduling period. This includes specifying the scheduling period, the pricing interval, and forecasting interval for the power distribution system according a target operation mode. The operation is either a day-ahead mode, or a real-time mode. For example, for a day-ahead model, the scheduling period, pricing interval, and forecasting interval can be set as 24 hours, 60 minutes, and 15 minutes, The scheduling period, pricing interval, and forecasting interval for a real-time mode can be 15 minutes, 15 minutes, and 3 minutes, respectively.
In step 420, forecasts of load demands and renewable generations of the power distribution system for each forecasting intervals of the next scheduling period are acquired by a power distribution system operator, or a regional transmission operator.
In step 430, optimal load control plans for all aggregated loads with flexibility for each forecasting interval of next scheduling period are determined. This includes separate price components for each substation during all pricing intervals of the next scheduling period.
In step 440, the power distribution system operator determines aggregated load control plans for each flexible load at each forecasting interval using the model described above.
In step 450, the independent system operator or regional transmission operator evaluates the aggregated demand fluctuations at the substation based on the load control plans from the power distribution system.
In step 460, the results of substation demand fluctuations are checked against a pre-determined tolerance range. If it is within the given range, go to step 470. Otherwise, go to step 430 to re-specify the price components for corresponding substation.
In step 470, the aggregated load control plans for the power distribution system are then allocated to each participating load devices in the system.
In step 480, each load device is controlled according to the allocated amount of powers.
The above steps can be performed in a processor 100 connected to memory and input and output interfaces by busses as known in the art.
Although the invention has been described by way of examples of preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that various other adaptations and modifications can be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, it is the object of the appended claims to cover all such variations and modifications as come within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
8068938 | Fujita | Nov 2011 | B2 |
20020138176 | Davis et al. | Sep 2002 | A1 |
20090187499 | Mulder et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20100106332 | Chassin | Apr 2010 | A1 |
20100211443 | Carrel et al. | Aug 2010 | A1 |
20110066300 | Tyagi et al. | Mar 2011 | A1 |
20160209857 | Nakasone | Jul 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170270548 A1 | Sep 2017 | US |