Evaluation of flexibility impacts of thermal electric storage using an integrated building-to-grid model
- Resource Type
- Conference
- Authors
- Anwar, Muhammad Bashar; O'Malley, Mark; Burke, Daniel J.
- Source
- 2017 IEEE International Conference on Smart Energy Grid Engineering (SEGE) Smart Energy Grid Engineering (SEGE), 2017 IEEE International Conference on. :242-247 Aug, 2017
- Subject
- Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Engineering Profession
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Robotics and Control Systems
Transportation
Space heating
Load modeling
Water heating
Resistance heating
Buildings
Power systems
Thermal management
ancillary services
demand side management
electric heating
energy arbitrage
smart thermal storage
- Language
Demand Side Management (DSM) using Thermal Electric Storage (TES) presents a promising opportunity for enhancing the system flexibility, resulting in reliable and economic operation of future low-carbon power systems. System-wide analysis of the flexibility potential of TES necessitates representation of dynamic thermal models in large-scale power systems models. Therefore, this study presents a novel Building-to-Grid (B2G) model integrating buildings' thermal dynamics and end-use constraints with a security-constrained unit commitment model for energy and reserve scheduling. The behaviour of residential thermal demand is represented through linear state space (RC-equivalent) models for different residential archetypes. The B2G model is subsequently used to evaluate the energy arbitrage and reserve provision potential of TES for a test system and various sensitivity analyses for wind penetration levels and presence of other flexibility options have been conducted. The optimisation results highlight the significant value of TES in terms of annual generation cost savings, reserve provision, peak load reduction and utilization of wind energy. The findings also emphasize the importance of co-optimising energy arbitrage and reserve provision from TES devices vis-a-vis system performance and household energy consumption scheduling.