Rightsizing the Design of a Hybrid Microgrid

Abstract

Selecting the sizes of distributed energy resources is a central planning element when designing a microgrid. Decision makers may consider several important factors, including, but not limited to, capacity, cost, reliability and sustainability. We introduce a method for rightsizing capacity that presents a range of potential microgrid design solutions, allowing decision makers to weigh their upsides and downsides based on a variety of measurable factors. We decouple component-specific modeling assumptions, energy management system logic and objective measurements from our simulation-based nested binary search method for rightsizing to meet power loads. In doing so, we develop a flexible, customizable and extensible approach to microgrid design planning. Aspects which have traditionally been incorporated directly in optimization-centric frameworks, such as resilience and reliability, can be treated as complementary analyses in our decoupled approach. This enables decision makers to gain exposure to a wide range of relevant information and actively participate in the microgrid design assessment process.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jul 15, 2021
Source ID
10.3390/en14144273

Entities

People

  • Daniel Reich
  • Giovanna Oriti

Organizations

  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Readers

  • Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Engineering.
  • Systems Analysis and Design