Towards Joint Power-Communication System Modelling and Optimisation for Smart Grid Application: Virtual Power Plant (TOPMOST)

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Title
Towards Joint Power-Communication System Modelling and Optimisation for Smart Grid Application: Virtual Power Plant (TOPMOST)

CoPED ID
5ae47973-9e4a-40ee-8717-603442d32644

Status
Closed


Value
£505,490

Start Date
Dec. 22, 2016

End Date
Sept. 4, 2018

Description

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The UK's electricity networks are serving millions of people everyday but now are facing a challenging future, with ageing infrastructure but increasing penetration of Renewable Energy Sources (RESs). As such, the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets (Ofgem) has approved plans to spend £17bn for upgrading the UK's electricity networks till 2023 by using smarter technologies. As one of the most promising solutions, smart grid has attracted much attention, since it is capable of enabling bidirectional flows of energy and communications in the power grid infrastructure, that is crucial in improving the reliability, security, and efficiency of the electric systems and keeping the lights on at minimum cost to consumers.

The proposed research is concerned with one key smart grid application, i.e., Virtual Power Plant (VPP) which is designed to aggregate the capacity of many diverse distributed energy resources (DERs) and flexible demands to create a single operating profile as one "virtual power plant" that helps balance supply and demand in real time. To facilitate VPP, both optimisation algorithms and communication technologies play a significant role, but the full potential of VPP has been hampered by the lack of joint power-communication system models and the thorough analysis of the impact of communication system imperfections to optimisation algorithms.

If successful, this research will provide better understandings of these two systems operating with close interactions in VPP, develop more advanced methods in the design of VPP, and implement a hardware testbed of VPP with two-way real-time communication capability in Durham Smart Grid Laboratory. These could potentially lead to more efficient management of RESs and flexible demands, ultimately to improved operational efficiency of power grids for system operators and to reduced cost for consumers. Perhaps most importantly, however, is that this research will enable us to begin asking how we shall optimise the performance of smart grid technologies, considering not only power systems but also realistic communication systems, thus encouraging multidisciplinary research and cross-fertilising both fields.


More Information

Potential Impact:
1. The project will provide advancement in knowledge about the modelling and optimisation of joint power-communication systems for supporting smart grid applications, particularly targeting at virtual power plant (VPP) but can be readily generalised to other smart grid applications such as demand side management and smart metering programmes. This will have high possibility of attracting the attention of academic researchers from the wide fields of power & energy, control, and communications.

2. The proposed research in WP 2 and the experimental approach in WP 3 are not only relevant to the power system research, but also can be readily utilised for developing and testing next generation communication techniques. It provides an opportunity of developing technical skills in the fields of both power systems and communication systems, to both the PDRA and the PhD student involved in the project. These skills are also transferable to the research areas of smart homes, smart cities, and Internet of things, which also involve the development of modelling and optimisation techniques for joint systems that involve the communication system.

3. This project will establish a new experimental testbed to validate and evaluate both models and algorithms for managing distributed energy resources (DERs) and flexible demands in VPP. This will not only help individual consumers or DERs to obtain more opportunities of gaining revenues, but also provide system operators with the chance of improving operational efficiency due to the efficient use of DERs and the integration of flexible demands.

4. Relevant energy industry will also be interested in testing their products in the smart grid environments, e.g., the project partner Sunamp Ltd has shown big interests in exploiting the use of heat batteries in VPP and extending their products with remote monitoring functionalities by using the proposed communication techniques (see the letter of support from Sunamp Ltd). It is very likely that other ambitious collaborative projects will be developed between Durham and industrial partners that further enhance international excellence of UK on the subject of smart grid technologies.

5. The UK governmental bodies have shown increasing interest in the development of smart grid technologies and encouraging low carbon innovations through dealing with regulatory barriers. This project will provide an important chance of investigating related issues. Building on Dr Sun's experience of contributing two written evidences to the UK governmental bodies (including the UK Parliamentary Committee on Energy and Climate Change, and the UK Government Department of Energy & Climate Change), new written evidences will be generated from the outcomes of the proposed research.

Hongjian SUN PI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Renewable energy sources
  2. Smart grids
  3. Electrical power networks
  4. Infrastructures
  5. Energy efficiency
  6. Optimisation
  7. Distribution of electricity

Extracted key phrases
  1. Key smart grid application
  2. Joint Power
  3. Communication System Modelling
  4. Virtual Power Plant
  5. Power system research
  6. Smart grid technology
  7. Communication system imperfection
  8. Realistic communication system
  9. Smart grid environment
  10. Power grid infrastructure
  11. Durham Smart Grid Laboratory
  12. Communication technology
  13. Smart technology
  14. Time communication capability
  15. Joint system

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations