Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification

With the prediction of greater reliance on marine transportation for social and economic growth in the future, the development of energy-efficient and environmentally friendly design and operation of the ships are becoming the main focus of research and industry. Furthermore, due to the excessive em...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hein, Kyaw
Other Authors: Xu Yan
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160224
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-160224
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Hein, Kyaw
Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
description With the prediction of greater reliance on marine transportation for social and economic growth in the future, the development of energy-efficient and environmentally friendly design and operation of the ships are becoming the main focus of research and industry. Furthermore, due to the excessive emission from marine vessels, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and regulatory authorities impose stringent rules and regulations to limit the overall emission. Over the past few years, the concept of more electrification, renewable energy resources, electrical energy storage integration, and energy optimization in land-based microgrid systems have proven to improve operational efficiency and reliability. Thus, there is an attempt to adapt existing solutions from the land-based microgrid to a more electric ship power system (mobile isolated microgrids). However, unlike its land-based counterparts, deriving power and energy management strategies to improve operational efficiency is a complex and unique problem for a marine vessel. It has to address multiple aspects of ship design and operation to establish a realistic operation scenario for a marine vessel. Furthermore, propulsion architecture selection, task-sequence planning, path selection, voyage scheduling, energy network coordination, short-term maintenance schedules, uncertainty management, and unique load management are additional dimensions of the mobile ship power system that introduce control, power, and energy dispatch complexity. Hence, the main objective of this thesis is to propose coordinated electric ship power system planning and operation strategies at different temporal stages while considering uncertainty, regulations, energy networks, maintenance requirements, and user-defined operation objectives. In Part II-Chapter 2, a regulation compliance joint rule-based decisions and optimization framework is proposed for propulsion architecture selection. It is based on the operation task sequence planning and energy management decisions. Part III deals with the short-term and day-ahead operation scheduling of the more electric ships. Various energy dispatch objectives such as emission reduction, energy storage degradation (Chapter 3), multi-energy coordination (Chapter 4), and short-term maintenance schedules (Chapter 5) are investigated as multi-objective or time coordinated (day-ahead, hour-ahead, and minute-ahead decisions) mathematical optimization problems in their respective chapters. Methods such as lexicographic augmented epsilon-constraints, goal programming, and weighted sum approach are used to formulate the multi-objective models in these chapters. Uncertainty management methods, such as reactive, robust, and probabilistic, are also discussed. Part IV-Chapter 6 of the thesis addresses the power management issues that arise from the short-duration power-intensive load (winch, crane, war-fighting load, electromagnetic launcher, and towing) in the more electric ship power system. As a result of stringent power quality requirements or objectives (voltage and frequency), power management with the help of energy storage is proposed. A zonal-protection architecture with the energy storage system and a generator is modeled in Simulink. It illustrates a two-stage power management strategy with the first stage as pulse shaping or frequency decoupling and the second stage as fuzzy-logic-based energy storage contribution decisions. The proposed strategies are demonstrated with various case studies to demonstrate their effectiveness in design, operation, and uncertainty management while improving the overall system operation efficiency. The modularity in the proposed approaches provides flexibility for different types of vessels and even other microgrid applications. The proposed frameworks are employed for the design evaluation and operation planning of various commercial marine projects in the Rolls-Royce Power System.
author2 Xu Yan
author_facet Xu Yan
Hein, Kyaw
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Hein, Kyaw
author_sort Hein, Kyaw
title Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
title_short Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
title_full Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
title_fullStr Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
title_full_unstemmed Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
title_sort power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160224
_version_ 1743119548497788928
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1602242022-08-01T05:07:18Z Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification Hein, Kyaw Xu Yan School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Rolls-Royce@NTU Corporate Lab xuyan@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering With the prediction of greater reliance on marine transportation for social and economic growth in the future, the development of energy-efficient and environmentally friendly design and operation of the ships are becoming the main focus of research and industry. Furthermore, due to the excessive emission from marine vessels, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and regulatory authorities impose stringent rules and regulations to limit the overall emission. Over the past few years, the concept of more electrification, renewable energy resources, electrical energy storage integration, and energy optimization in land-based microgrid systems have proven to improve operational efficiency and reliability. Thus, there is an attempt to adapt existing solutions from the land-based microgrid to a more electric ship power system (mobile isolated microgrids). However, unlike its land-based counterparts, deriving power and energy management strategies to improve operational efficiency is a complex and unique problem for a marine vessel. It has to address multiple aspects of ship design and operation to establish a realistic operation scenario for a marine vessel. Furthermore, propulsion architecture selection, task-sequence planning, path selection, voyage scheduling, energy network coordination, short-term maintenance schedules, uncertainty management, and unique load management are additional dimensions of the mobile ship power system that introduce control, power, and energy dispatch complexity. Hence, the main objective of this thesis is to propose coordinated electric ship power system planning and operation strategies at different temporal stages while considering uncertainty, regulations, energy networks, maintenance requirements, and user-defined operation objectives. In Part II-Chapter 2, a regulation compliance joint rule-based decisions and optimization framework is proposed for propulsion architecture selection. It is based on the operation task sequence planning and energy management decisions. Part III deals with the short-term and day-ahead operation scheduling of the more electric ships. Various energy dispatch objectives such as emission reduction, energy storage degradation (Chapter 3), multi-energy coordination (Chapter 4), and short-term maintenance schedules (Chapter 5) are investigated as multi-objective or time coordinated (day-ahead, hour-ahead, and minute-ahead decisions) mathematical optimization problems in their respective chapters. Methods such as lexicographic augmented epsilon-constraints, goal programming, and weighted sum approach are used to formulate the multi-objective models in these chapters. Uncertainty management methods, such as reactive, robust, and probabilistic, are also discussed. Part IV-Chapter 6 of the thesis addresses the power management issues that arise from the short-duration power-intensive load (winch, crane, war-fighting load, electromagnetic launcher, and towing) in the more electric ship power system. As a result of stringent power quality requirements or objectives (voltage and frequency), power management with the help of energy storage is proposed. A zonal-protection architecture with the energy storage system and a generator is modeled in Simulink. It illustrates a two-stage power management strategy with the first stage as pulse shaping or frequency decoupling and the second stage as fuzzy-logic-based energy storage contribution decisions. The proposed strategies are demonstrated with various case studies to demonstrate their effectiveness in design, operation, and uncertainty management while improving the overall system operation efficiency. The modularity in the proposed approaches provides flexibility for different types of vessels and even other microgrid applications. The proposed frameworks are employed for the design evaluation and operation planning of various commercial marine projects in the Rolls-Royce Power System. Doctor of Philosophy 2022-07-18T00:34:40Z 2022-07-18T00:34:40Z 2022 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Hein, K. (2022). Power and energy management optimization for marine transportation electrification. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160224 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160224 10.32657/10356/160224 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University