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Well-being approach of a power system containing run-of the-river power plants

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Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Renewable energies especially Run-Of the-River (ROR) power plants are increasingly used for the electricity generation in the power systems. The uncertain and intermittent nature of these plants arisen from variability of water flow, however, has led to some problems in their integration to power systems. Thus, the operating reserve requirement in a power system containing large ROR plants is a main challenge, which has to be addressed properly. In this way, this paper presents an analytical approach to determine the adequate spinning reserve based on the well-being approach during the system operation. The reliability model based on the components failures and uncertainty nature of water flow is introduced for ROR plants operation studies. This approach not only evaluates the interaction between these energies and conventional units, but also determines the contribution that ROR power plants can make in load carrying capability of a power generating system. Two reliability test systems, utilized from water flow data of Sheshpir River in Iran, are examined to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed model.
Twórcy
  • Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
  • Center of Excellence in Power System Management & Control, Department of Electrical Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran
autor
  • Department of Electrical Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran
Bibliografia
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  • 4.Zhao Q., et al. Evaluation of nodal reliability risk in a deregulated power system with photovoltaic power penetration. IET Generation, Transmission & Distribution, , 8(3), 2014, 421–430.
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  • 7.Teymour H. R., et al. Solar PV and battery storage integration using a new configuration of a three-level NPC inverter with advanced control strategy. IEEE Transactions on Energy Conversion, 29(2), 2014, 354–365.
  • 8.Lu S., et al. A model for optimizing spinning reserve requirement of power system under low-carbon economy. IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Energy, 5(4), 2014, 1048–1055.
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  • 13.Leite Da Silva A. M., et al. Long-term probabilistic evaluation of operating reserve requirements with renewable sources. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 25(1), 2010, 106–116.
  • 14.Billinton R., et al. Unit commitment risk analysis of wind integrated power systems. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 24(2), 2009, 930–939.
  • 15.Khalilzadeh E., Fotuhi-Firuzabad M. and Ghaedi A. Reliability modeling of run-of the-river power plants in power system adequacy studies. IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Energy, 5(4), 2014, 1278–1286.
  • 16.Billinton R. and Allan R. N. Reliability evaluation of engineering systems. plenum press, second edition, London, 1992.
  • 17.Billinton R. and Fotuhi-Firuzabad M. A basic framework for generating system operating health analysis. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 9(3), 1994, 1610–1617.
  • 18.Billinton R., et al. A reliability test system for educational purposes-basic data. Power Engineering Review, IEEE, 9(8), 1989, 67–68.
  • 19.Reliability Test System Task Force of the Application of Probability Methods subcommittee. IEEE reliability test system, IEEE Transactions Power Applications System, 98(6), 1979, 2047–2054.
Uwagi
Opracowanie ze środków MNiSW w ramach umowy 812/P-DUN/2016 na działalność upowszechniającą naukę (zadania 2017)
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
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