An Optimal Scheduling and Planning of Campus Microgrid Based on Demand Response and Battery Lifetime

Existing electricity supply systems face several challenges, including increasing energy prices with greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and fossil fuel depletion.  These issues have a significant impact on all power system stakeholders, including customers/prosumers, utilities, and microgrid operators....

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Veröffentlicht in:Pakistan Journal of Engineering & Technology 2021-09, Vol.4 (3), p.8-17
Hauptverfasser: Pansota, Muhammad Shahzad, Javed, Haseeb, Muqeet, H. A., Khan, Hamza Ali, Ahmed, Naveed, Nadeem, Muhammad Usama, Ahmed, Syed Usman Faheem, Sarfraz, Ali
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Existing electricity supply systems face several challenges, including increasing energy prices with greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and fossil fuel depletion.  These issues have a significant impact on all power system stakeholders, including customers/prosumers, utilities, and microgrid operators. Renewable energy incorporation and different energy managing strategies such as demand-side management (DSM), demand response (DR), and others may help to overcome these limitations. Campus microgrids are among the largest energy consumers in the United States, with high energy expenditures. This article presents a new energy management (EMS) system for a university campus microgrid with onsite solar PV and ESS that operates in a grid exchange scenario. The suggested EMS not only lowers power consumption costs by prolonging storage life; however, it also guarantees grid stability through limiting and shifting loads using price-based and incentive-based demand response methods. ESS is utilized as a stand-by energy reserve to maintain the microgrid system stability and to assist the utility network in the event of a power outage. In MATLAB, a quadratic approach is used to solve the proposed framework. According to the findings, the suggested EMS decreases the prosumer's operating cost and increasing self-consumption, minimizes peak load from the national grid, and encourages campus stakeholders and energy controllers to engage in large-scale ESS installations and distributed generation (DG).
ISSN:2664-2042
2664-2050
DOI:10.51846/vol4iss3pp8-17