Systems and methods for managing infrastructure systems
US-2015350260-A1 · Dec 3, 2015 · US
US9804623B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9804623-B2 |
| Application number | US-201214342191-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Oct 10, 2012 |
| Priority date | Oct 10, 2012 |
| Publication date | Oct 31, 2017 |
| Grant date | Oct 31, 2017 |
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Technologies are generally described for addressing the bidirectional power flow conflict incurred by power surpluses produced from a number of households' on-location energy generation units (e.g., solar) in power distribution networks. A micro grid composed of households in a neighborhood may be considered as a generating- or consuming-resource entity at different time periods. The approach may be formulated as a power balance computation such that power balance may not be achieved within the micro grid itself, and therefore power sharing (or redispatching) among micro grids is operated, before requesting power from the macro grid, i.e., the fuel-based conventional grid. Enhancement of renewable energy utilization and reduction in the amount of data packet traffic in exchange of information and control messages via uplink and downlink transmissions throughout an overlay multi-tier communications network infrastructure may be taken into consideration in example implementations.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A method to facilitate decentralized controls and communications for autonomous distribution networks in a smart grid, the method comprising: structuring at least a portion of the smart grid in a four tiered architecture, wherein: a first tier comprises a central control center (CCC) configured to manage a plurality of distribution control centers (DCCs), each DCC representative of an autonomous distribution network (ADN), a second tier comprises a plurality of first control centers (CCs), each first CC representative of a subsystem, a third tier comprises a plurality of second CCs, each second CC representative of a neighborhood or a field area network, and a fourth tier comprises a plurality of micro grids (MGs), each MG comprising, one or more households and each MG being managed by a second CC in the third tier; enabling exchange of power availability and/or need information among the one or more households, the plurality of MGs, and the plurality of first and second CCs through uplink and downlink communications; collecting data from the plurality of MGs, a plurality of substations, and/or a plurality of ADNs at each tier; aggregating the data collected from one or more of the plurality of MGs, the plurality of substations, and/or the plurality of ADNs at each tier, abstracting the aggregated data before transmission of the abstracted data to a higher tier, wherein abstracting the aggregated data comprises reducing the aggregated data into reduced data for transmission of the reduced data to a controller in the higher tier via the uplink and the downlink communications, and wherein an amount of the aggregated data to be reduced is quantitatively defined by an abstraction ratio at which information in the uplink communication is reduced while power sharing among the plurality of MGs, the plurality of substations, and/or the plurality of ADNs is performed; and controlling distribution of excess power among the plurality of MGs and a plurality of subsystems, while the abstracted data is transmitted to the higher tier. 2. The method according to claim 1 , further comprising: forming a connected, undirected tree graph based on the four tiered architecture, wherein each vertex of the tree graph represents a power distribution bus with associated households and each edge represents a line feeder with one of a power injection or a power extraction. 3. The method according to claim 2 , further comprising: designating a household v i as, a generating unit if P vi >0 and as a consuming unit if P vi <0, wherein P vi is a power value associated with the household v i injecting or extracting power to or from the smart grid; and designating the household v i as an idle unit when P vi approaches about zero. 4. The method according to claim 2 , further comprising: determining a child-parent relationship (W) and a depth (D) for each node of the tree graph; sorting nodes of the time graph in a descending order of the depth of each node; and computing power flow values flow for each edge of the tree graph based on surplus or needed power of each node and the W of each node. 5. The method according to claim 4 , wherein: computing the power flow values includes starting computation from a leaf node with a largest depth value or a farthest node from a distribution transformer. 6. The method according, to claim 1 , further comprising: if a power imbalance within an MG is balanceable by adjusting power flows among households of the MG, limiting the uplink and downlink communications to the third tier and the fourth tier as the power imbalance is corrected. 7. The method according to claim 6 , further comprising: if the power imbalance within the MG is not balanceable by adjusting the power flows among the households of the MG, facilitating power sharing among two or more MGs by extending the uplink and downlink communications to the second tier as the power imbalance is corrected. 8. The method according to claim 7 , further comprising: if the power imbalance within the MG is not balanceable by the power sharing among the two or more MGs, facilitating power sharing among two or more substations by extending the uplink and downlink communications to the plurality of DCCs of the first tier as the power imbalance is corrected. 9. The method according to claim 8 , further comprising: if the power imbalance within the MG is not balanceable by the power sharing among the two or more substations, facilitating power sharing among two or more ADNs by extending the uplink and downlink communications to the CCC of the first tier as the power imbalance is corrected. 10. The method according to claim 1 , wherein the abstraction ratio is an amount of data that carries sufficient information to be transmitted to the higher tier divided by a total amount of data received from a lower tier. 11. A smart power distribution network configured to facilitate decentralized controls and communications for autonomous distribution networks, the smart power distribution network comprising: a first tier that comprises a central control center (CCC) configured to manage a plurality of distribution control centers (DCCs), each DCC representative of an autonomous distribution network (ADN); a second tier that comprises a plurality of first control centers (CCs), each first CC representative of a subsystem; a third tier that comprises a plurality of second CCs, each second CC representative of a neighborhood or a field area network; and a fourth tier that comprises a plurality of micro grids (MGs), wherein each MG comprises one or more households and each MG is managed by a second CC in the third tier, and wherein the smart power distribution, network is configured to: exchange of power availability and/or need information among the one or more households, the plurality of MGs, and the plurality of first and second CCs through uplink and downlink communications; enable collection of data from the plurality of MGs, a plurality of substations, and/or a plurality of ADNs at each tier; enable aggregation of the data collected from one or more of the plurality of MGs, the plurality of substations, and/or the plurality of ADNs at each tier; enable abstraction of the aggregated data before transmission of the abstracted data to a higher tier, wherein the abstraction of the aggregated data comprises reduction of the aggregated data into reduced data for transmission of the reduced data to a controller in the higher tier via the uplink and downlink communications, and wherein an amount of the aggregated data to be reduced is quantitatively defined by an abstraction ratio at which the information in the uplink communication is reduced; and control distribution of excess power among the plurality of MGs and a plurality of subsystems, while the abstracted data is transmitted to the higher tier. 12. The smart power distribution network according to claim 11 , wherein the uplink and downlink communications are limited to the third tier and fourth tier as a power imbalance is corrected, if the power imbalance within an MG is balanceable by adjustment of power flows among households of the MG. 13. The smart power distribution network according to claim 12 , wherein power sharing is facilitated among two or more: MGs by extension of the uplink and downlink communications to the second tier as the power imbalance is corrected if the power imbalance within the MG is not balanceable by adjustment of the power flows among the households of the MG; substations by extension of the uplink and downlink communications to the plurality of DCCs of the first tier as
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