4.5 Article

A Low-Voltage DC Backbone with Aggregated RES and BESS: Benefits Compared to a Traditional Low-Voltage AC System

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14051420

Keywords

LVDC; self-sufficiency index; load aggregation; power converters; photovoltaic; efficiency

Categories

Funding

  1. European Fund for Regional Development via the Interreg North Sea Region Programme

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As PV systems penetrate the distribution grid, congestion and power quality issues arise. Introducing a low-voltage DC backbone can reduce conversion losses and optimize integration. Sharing renewable energy and battery systems can improve self-consumption and self-sufficiency indexes.
The increasing penetration of PV into the distribution grid leads to congestion, causing detrimental power quality issues. Moreover, the multiple small photovoltaic (PV) systems and battery energy storage systems (BESSs) result in increasing conversion losses. A low-voltage DC (LVDC) backbone to interconnect these assets would decrease the conversion losses and is a promising solution for a more optimal integration of PV systems. The multiple small PV systems can be replaced by shared assets with large common PV installations and a large BESS. Sharing renewable energy and aggregation are activities that are stimulated by the European Commission and lead to a substantial benefit in terms of self-consumption index (SCI) and self-sufficiency index (SSI). In this study, the benefit of an LVDC backbone is investigated compared to using a low-voltage AC (LVAC) system. It is found that the cable losses increase by 0.9 percent points and the conversion losses decrease by 12 percent points compared to the traditional low-voltage AC (LVAC) system. The SCI increases by 2 percent points and the SSI increases by 6 percent points compared to using an LVAC system with shared meter. It is shown that an LVDC backbone is only beneficial with a PV penetration level of 65% and that the BESS can be reduced by 22% for the same SSI.

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