Simulation of demand management and grid balancing with electric vehicles

This study investigates the potential role of electric vehicles in an electricity network with a high contribution from variable generation such as wind power. Electric vehicles are modelled to provide demand management through flexible charging requirements and energy balancing for the network. Bal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of power sources 2012-10, Vol.216, p.104-116
Hauptverfasser: Druitt, James, Früh, Wolf-Gerrit
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study investigates the potential role of electric vehicles in an electricity network with a high contribution from variable generation such as wind power. Electric vehicles are modelled to provide demand management through flexible charging requirements and energy balancing for the network. Balancing applications include both demand balancing and vehicle-to-grid discharging. This study is configured to represent the UK grid with balancing requirements derived from wind generation calculated from weather station wind speeds on the supply side and National Grid data from on the demand side. The simulation models 1000 individual vehicle entities to represent the behaviour of larger numbers of vehicles. A stochastic trip generation profile is used to generate realistic journey characteristics, whilst a market pricing model allows charging and balancing decisions to be based on realistic market price conditions. The simulation has been tested with wind generation capacities representing up to 30% of UK consumption. Results show significant improvements to load following conditions with the introduction of electric vehicles, suggesting that they could substantially facilitate the uptake of intermittent renewable generation. Electric vehicle owners would benefit from flexible charging and selling tariffs, with the majority of revenue derived from vehicle-to-grid participation in balancing markets. ► We model integration of electric vehicles and wind power into an electricity grid. ► The electric vehicle behaviour is driven by driver needs and electricity prices. ► The model calculates benefits for electricity supplier and individual drivers. ► Real-time market pricing information is important for drivers.
ISSN:0378-7753
1873-2755
DOI:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2012.05.033