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Publications

Publications by CPES

2008

An active reactive bid-based market model using fuzzy sets

Authors
Gomes, MH; Saraiva, JT;

Publication
ENGINEERING INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS FOR ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMMUNICATIONS

Abstract
The restructuring of power systems has often originated the organization of power system operation planning in a set of chronological sequence of activities that are reasonably decoupled. This means that the Market Operator purely economic schedule together with bilateral contracts is conveyed to the System Operator to be validated from a technical point of view. The System Operator also has to schedule reactive power but some of its reactive power requirements may be unfeasible given the previous active power schedules and the alternator capability diagram. Apart from this aspect, active and reactive powers are coupled in determining the eventual violation of branch thermal limits and reactive power has a well-known local nature. While recognizing the Coupling between active and reactive powers, the models presented in this paper admit that the Market Operator schedule may have to be altered either because there are branch limit or nodal voltage violations or because the System Operator requires a reactive output that can not be provided Clue to the previous active schedule. The changes on the initial schedule are determined by solving an optimization problem that uses adjustment generator or demand bids. Apart from that, we adopted a symmetric fuzzy programming approach recognizing that some constraints have a soft nature, namely the ones related with voltage and branch flow limits. To solve the resulting non-linear problem we used Sequential Linear Programming, SLP. At its final iteration this problem also Outputs active and reactive nodal marginal prices useful to build more effective tariff systems. The paper includes a case study based on the IEEE 24 bus test system.

2008

Probabilistic Power Generation Expansion Planning in a Competitive Electricity Market

Authors
Pereira, AJC; Saraiva, JT;

Publication
2008 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PROBABILISTIC METHODS APPLIED TO POWER SYSTEMS

Abstract
This paper addresses the generation expansion-planning problem describing a model that generation companies can use to get insight to this problem and to more completely study and characterize different investment decisions. In the last 20 years, the generation activity evolved from a situation in which it was part of vertical companies to unbundled market agents that face a much more risky and uncertain environment. This explains the need to develop this kind of simulation tools to help them building their investment plans as well as analyzing the impact of possible decisions of other players. The simulation model considers a number of possible generation technologies and aims at characterizing the corresponding investment plans from an economic point of view having in mind that market prices, the demand growth, investment and operation costs, as well as other factors, are affected by uncertainties. These uncertainties are modeled by pdf functions and the solution approach uses a Monte Carlo Simulation to sample particular values used to analyse the different investment alternatives from an economic point of view. Finally, the paper presents results from a Case Study illustrating the use of this approach.

2008

A voltage control optimization for distribution networks with DG and microgrids

Authors
Lopes, JAP; Madureira, A;

Publication
Optimization Advances in Electric Power Systems

Abstract
In general, distributed generation is not subject to a centralized dispatch and reactive power generation is usually restricted by operation rules defined by the distribution system operators. With the growth of distributed generation and microgrids in distribution networks, the development of voltage control functionalities for these units needs to be investigated. This requires a new operation philosophy to exploit reactive power generation capability of distributed generation and microgeneration with the objective of optimizing network operation: minimize active power losses and maintain voltage profiles within adequate margins. This implies that distributed generation should adjust their reactive power generation, i.e. supply an ancillary service of voltage and reactive power control. In addition to the growth in distributed generation penetration, microgeneration is expected to develop considerably and contribute to the implementation of efficient voltage control schemes. For this new scenario, a hierarchical voltage control scheme must be implemented, using communication and control possibilities that will be made available for microgrid operation. Technical advantages and feasibility of this operation philosophy are investigated in this chapter by analyzing the impact of the proposed control procedures on distribution networks. In addition, the identification of control action needs is assessed by solving an optimization problem, where voltage profiles are improved and active power losses minimized, subject to a set of technical constraints. The solution for this problem is obtained using an Evolutionary Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm. The control algorithm implemented will enable dealing even with extreme situations, where reactive power control is not sufficient to maintain system operation and therefore generation shedding actions must be performed.

2008

How to prepare a power system for 15% wind energy penetration: the Portuguese case study

Authors
Estanqueiro, A; Castro, R; Flores, P; Ricardo, J; Pinto, M; Rodrigues, R; Lopes, JP;

Publication
WIND ENERGY

Abstract
The 2001/77/CE Renewable Energies European Directive together with Kyoto Protocol ratification supported by a government vision and strong objective on the reduction of external oil dependence put Portugal in the front line to achieve one of the highest wind energy penetrations within 10 years' time. This paper gives a summarized overview of the Portuguese technical approaches and methodologies followed in order to plan and accommodate the ambitious wind power goals to 2010/2013, preserving the overall quality of the power system. Copyright (C) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

2008

529: Failed Back Surgery Syndrome

Authors
FERREIRA, M; REBELO, H; GOMES, D; ARANTES, S; PEREIRA, J; MARCOS, A;

Publication
Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine

Abstract

2008

Fault Detection on Wind Generators

Authors
Brandao, RM; Carvalho, JB; Barbosa, FM;

Publication
2008 PROCEEDINGS OF THE 43RD INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITIES POWER ENGINEERING CONFERENCE, VOLS 1-3

Abstract
All over the world, energy companies are investing in technologies to make better use of renewable energy to generate electric power. Wind energy is the renewable energy source that had a higher growing in the last decades and can be considered a hope in future based on dean and sustainable energy. The development of tools that allows operators and maintenance personnel to correlate machinery related information with other operational information such as machine speed, electrical load, and wind speed, are needed.

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