Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation

With the increasing installed capacity of renewable energy sources (RESs) in the power systems, their uncertainty and intermittency are causing power imbalances in the grid, which leads to frequency regulation issues. When rapid fluctuations take place, the system requires fast responding regulation...

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Main Author: Zhang, Tian
Other Authors: Gooi Hoay Beng
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72457
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-72457
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institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Zhang, Tian
Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
description With the increasing installed capacity of renewable energy sources (RESs) in the power systems, their uncertainty and intermittency are causing power imbalances in the grid, which leads to frequency regulation issues. When rapid fluctuations take place, the system requires fast responding regulation resources to recover the frequency within a short period of time. While traditional power plants with slow dynamics are less capable of tracking the fast-changing regulation signals, battery energy storage systems (BESSs) are considered as an effective regulation source to respond immediately to frequency deviations. From the system operator's point of view, a proper procedure for BESS sizing and control is required to ensure a long-term high quality regulation service on the system level. We study the sizing issue of a BESS aggregation based on the overall system control performance. The frequency performance with different penetration rates of BESS is analyzed. The frequency performance is evaluated by Control Performance Standard 1 (CPS1) and Control Performance Standard 2 (CPS2) proposed by North American Electricity Reliability Corporation (NERC). The recommended BESS penetration rate in the power system is analyzed using an iterative approach according to the NERC performance indices. Taking the investment cost into consideration, a 5% to 15% BESS penetration rate is recommended for the test system. For a network penetrated with dispersedly located RESs, distributed energy resources (DERs) and storage devices, the virtual power plant (VPP) concept is applied to aggregate the resources. A centralized hierarchical controller is proposed for the VPP to achieve a more economical operation and more effective system frequency regulation. Model predictive control (MPC) strategy is implemented in the controller. The VPP's influence on system frequency is studied by real-time simulations. The results show that the secondary control executes economic dispatch to coordinate the power dispatch within the VPP according to photovoltaic (PV) power output, load data, and real-time electricity tariff. In the meantime, the primary controller is capable of stabilizing system frequency within the permitted range during heavy load and peak solar generation periods. The proposed hierarchical control scheme is further developed for a distribution network with distributed BESSs which can be aggregated as a VPP. As it is difficult for BESSs to be profitable due to high battery costs, the aggregated BESSs are maneuvered to participate in multiple markets. We propose a hierarchical energy management system (HiEMS) for aggregated BESSs taking part in both energy and regulation markets. The HiEMS performs optimal scheduling in multiple markets and attempts to coordinate BESSs of different battery types, various state of charge (SOC), and power and energy capacity. The SOC values are regulated around the expected average SOC to prevent individual saturation or depletion, and thus increasing the average battery lifetime. The proposed HiEMS can support up to 0.5 regulation participation rate, which will boost the cost performance index (CPI) by 7 times. HiEMS outperforms participation factor (PF) method by 1.24 times and master-slave (M-S) method by 1.4. In terms of time of first replacement, HiEMS is 2.15 times loner than that of the PF method and 3.75 times longer than that of the MS method. In current markets, the performance-based regulation market in Pennsylvania-Jersey-Maryland power pool, i.e. PJM Interconnection Company, is the most profitable one for BESSs. While the BESSs are always assumed to deliver very high performance, an optimal schedule optimizer is proposed including an innovative realistic BESS performance model. The performance model, which characterizes the trade-off between the performance and the power bids in both energy and regulation markets, contributes to the regulation energy scheduling and guarantees BESS performance. The schedule optimizer also models the pricing uncertainties in both markets by generating scenarios according to their respective statistical characteristics. After adopting the proposed optimal scheduling strategy, the cost-performance index (CPI) of the BESSs governed by HiEMS is boosted to 31.70%, compared to around 10% from only energy market participation.
author2 Gooi Hoay Beng
author_facet Gooi Hoay Beng
Zhang, Tian
format Theses and Dissertations
author Zhang, Tian
author_sort Zhang, Tian
title Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
title_short Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
title_full Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
title_fullStr Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
title_full_unstemmed Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation
title_sort performance studies and energy management of aggregated besss for frequency regulation
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72457
_version_ 1772827492261822464
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-724572023-07-04T17:27:02Z Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation Zhang, Tian Gooi Hoay Beng School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering With the increasing installed capacity of renewable energy sources (RESs) in the power systems, their uncertainty and intermittency are causing power imbalances in the grid, which leads to frequency regulation issues. When rapid fluctuations take place, the system requires fast responding regulation resources to recover the frequency within a short period of time. While traditional power plants with slow dynamics are less capable of tracking the fast-changing regulation signals, battery energy storage systems (BESSs) are considered as an effective regulation source to respond immediately to frequency deviations. From the system operator's point of view, a proper procedure for BESS sizing and control is required to ensure a long-term high quality regulation service on the system level. We study the sizing issue of a BESS aggregation based on the overall system control performance. The frequency performance with different penetration rates of BESS is analyzed. The frequency performance is evaluated by Control Performance Standard 1 (CPS1) and Control Performance Standard 2 (CPS2) proposed by North American Electricity Reliability Corporation (NERC). The recommended BESS penetration rate in the power system is analyzed using an iterative approach according to the NERC performance indices. Taking the investment cost into consideration, a 5% to 15% BESS penetration rate is recommended for the test system. For a network penetrated with dispersedly located RESs, distributed energy resources (DERs) and storage devices, the virtual power plant (VPP) concept is applied to aggregate the resources. A centralized hierarchical controller is proposed for the VPP to achieve a more economical operation and more effective system frequency regulation. Model predictive control (MPC) strategy is implemented in the controller. The VPP's influence on system frequency is studied by real-time simulations. The results show that the secondary control executes economic dispatch to coordinate the power dispatch within the VPP according to photovoltaic (PV) power output, load data, and real-time electricity tariff. In the meantime, the primary controller is capable of stabilizing system frequency within the permitted range during heavy load and peak solar generation periods. The proposed hierarchical control scheme is further developed for a distribution network with distributed BESSs which can be aggregated as a VPP. As it is difficult for BESSs to be profitable due to high battery costs, the aggregated BESSs are maneuvered to participate in multiple markets. We propose a hierarchical energy management system (HiEMS) for aggregated BESSs taking part in both energy and regulation markets. The HiEMS performs optimal scheduling in multiple markets and attempts to coordinate BESSs of different battery types, various state of charge (SOC), and power and energy capacity. The SOC values are regulated around the expected average SOC to prevent individual saturation or depletion, and thus increasing the average battery lifetime. The proposed HiEMS can support up to 0.5 regulation participation rate, which will boost the cost performance index (CPI) by 7 times. HiEMS outperforms participation factor (PF) method by 1.24 times and master-slave (M-S) method by 1.4. In terms of time of first replacement, HiEMS is 2.15 times loner than that of the PF method and 3.75 times longer than that of the MS method. In current markets, the performance-based regulation market in Pennsylvania-Jersey-Maryland power pool, i.e. PJM Interconnection Company, is the most profitable one for BESSs. While the BESSs are always assumed to deliver very high performance, an optimal schedule optimizer is proposed including an innovative realistic BESS performance model. The performance model, which characterizes the trade-off between the performance and the power bids in both energy and regulation markets, contributes to the regulation energy scheduling and guarantees BESS performance. The schedule optimizer also models the pricing uncertainties in both markets by generating scenarios according to their respective statistical characteristics. After adopting the proposed optimal scheduling strategy, the cost-performance index (CPI) of the BESSs governed by HiEMS is boosted to 31.70%, compared to around 10% from only energy market participation. Doctor of Philosophy (EEE) 2017-07-25T08:50:54Z 2017-07-25T08:50:54Z 2017 Thesis Zhang, T. (2017). Performance studies and energy management of aggregated BESSs for frequency regulation. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72457 10.32657/10356/72457 en 137 p. application/pdf