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Publications

2020

Participation of an EV Aggregator in the Reserve Market through Chance-Constrained Optimization

Authors
Faria, AS; Soares, T; Sousa, T; Matos, MA;

Publication
ENERGIES

Abstract
The adoption of Electric Vehicles (EVs) will revolutionize the storage capacity in the power system and, therefore, will contribute to mitigate the uncertainty of renewable generation. In addition, EVs have fast response capabilities and are suitable for frequency regulation, which is essential for the proliferation of intermittent renewable sources. To this end, EV aggregators will arise as a market representative party on behalf of EVs. Thus, this player will be responsible for supplying the power needed to charge EVs, as well as offering their flexibility to support the system. The main goal of EV aggregators is to manage the potential participation of EVs in the reserve market, accounting for their charging and travel needs. This work follows this trend by conceiving a chance-constrained model able to optimize EVs participation in the reserve market, taking into account the uncertain behavior of EVs and their charging needs. The proposed model, includes penalties in the event of a failure in the provision of upward or downward reserve. Therefore, stochastic and chance-constrained programming are used to handle the uncertainty of a small fleet of EVs and the risk profile of the EV aggregator. Two different relaxation approaches, i.e., Big-M and McCormick, of the chance-constrained model are tested and validated for different number of scenarios and risk levels, based on an actual test case in Denmark with actual driving patterns. As a final remark, the McCormick relaxation presents better performance when the uncertainty budget increases, which is appropriated for large-scale problems.

2020

The impact of research output on economic growth by fields of science: a dynamic panel data analysis, 1980-2016

Authors
Pinto, T; Teixeira, AAC;

Publication
SCIENTOMETRICS

Abstract
Whether research output significantly impacts on economic growth, and which research areas/fields of science matter the most to improve the economic performance of countries, stand as fundamental endeavors of scientific inquiry. Although the extant literature has analyzed the impact of research output on economic growth both holistically and by field, the impact of academic knowledge as a capital good (hard and social sciences) versus a final good (medical and humanities) has been largely neglected in analyses involving large sets of countries over a broad period of time. Based on a sample of 65 countries over 36 years (1980 to 2016), and employing system GMM dynamic panel data estimations, four main results are worth highlighting: (1) holistic research output positively and significantly impacts on economic growth; (2) both the academic knowledge of scientific areas that most resemble capital goods (physical sciences, engineering and technology, life sciences or social sciences) or final goods (base clinical, pre-clinical and health or arts and humanities) foster economic performance; (3) the global impact of research output is particularly high in the fields of engineering and technology, social sciences, and physics; and (4) the impact of research output on economic growth occurs mainly through structural change processes involving the reallocation of resources towards the industrial sector.

2020

New Insights in the Quality of Phaseolus vulgaris L.: Nutritional Value, Functional Properties and Development of Innovative Tools for Their Assessment

Authors
Carbas, B; Machado, N; Brites, C; Rosa, EA; Barros, AI;

Publication
The 1st International Electronic Conference on Food Science and Functional Foods

Abstract

2020

Implications of Mobility as a Service (MaaS) in Urban and Rural Environments

Authors
Amaral, AM; Barreto, L; Baltazar, S; Silva, JP; Gonçalves, L;

Publication
Practice, Progress, and Proficiency in Sustainability

Abstract

2020

Bone scintigraphy and PET-CT: A necessary alliance for bone metastasis detection in breast cancer?

Authors
Santos, JC; Abreu, MH; Santos, MS; Duarte, H; Alpoim, T; Sousa, S; Abreu, PH;

Publication
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

Abstract
e13070 Background: Bone is one of the main sites of breast cancer metastasis. Staging of this kind of disease spread can be performed in locally advanced cases with PET-CT in conjunction with Bone Scintigraphy. The purpose of this work is to compare the efficiency of bone metastasis detection between PET-CT and bone scintigraphy. Methods: Prospective analysis of locally advanced breast cancer patients treated in a Comprehensive Cancer Center between 2014 and 2019 that performed PET-CT and Bone Scintigraphy in the staging. Interval between the two exams could not exceed 2 months. Clinical and pathological characteristics of the disease were collected from electronic files and independently clinical images reports were considered to evaluate the ability of each imaging modalities to identify bone disease. In discrepancy cases a re-analysis of the images by two independent nuclear physicians was performed to validate the findings. Results: We analyzed 204 cases. The majority of them had ductal carcinomas (72.5%), cT2/3 (70%), cN1/2(61.8%) and G2/3 (94.6%), luminal B- like, HER2 positive disease (49.2%). In this cohort, bone metastasis was documented in 52 (25.5%) patients. PET-CT presented 97.0% of accuracy, surpassing the 94.1% presented by Bone Scintigraphy. The latter failed to correctly detect bone metastasis in 11 (5.4%) patients and only outperformed PET-CT in 3 (1.5%) patients. The main difference between the two modalities was the non-detection of cranium lesions in PET-CT images. Conclusions: PET-CT showed higher efficiency in bone metastasis detection than Bone Scintigraphy, probably because it detects lytic lesions. The non-detection of cranium ones can be harmful and so modifications in the image acquisition are required to improve the quality of PET-CT, avoiding other exams in bone staging.

2020

Fostering the relation and the connectivity between smart homes and grids – InterConnect project

Authors
Terras, JM; Simão, T; Rua, D; Coelho, F; Gouveia, C; Bessa, R; Baumeister, J; Prümm, RI; Genest, O; Siarheyeva, A; Laarakkers, J; Rivero, E; Bosco, E; Nemcek, P; Glennung, K;

Publication
IET Conference Publications

Abstract
This study offers an overview of the H2020 InterConnect project, which targets the relation between smart homes and distribution grids. The project vision is to produce a digital marketplace, using an interoperable marketplace toolbox and Smart appliances REference Ontology (SAREF) compliant Internet of Things (IoT) reference architecture as the main backbone, through which all SAREF-ized services, compliant devices, platform enablers and applications can be downloaded onto IoT and smart grid digital platforms. Energy users in buildings, either residential or non-residential, manufacturers, distribution grid operators and the energy retailers will work together towards the demonstration of the smart energy management solutions in seven connected large-scale test-sites in Portugal, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Greece and France. This study depicts how InterConnect project will enhance the relation and the interconnectivity between smart buildings and grids safeguarding the definition of the role of each stakeholder in energy and non-energy services.

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