4.7 Article

Economic Power Dispatch of a Grid-Tied Photovoltaic-Based Energy Management System: Co-Optimization Approach

Journal

MATHEMATICS
Volume 11, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/math11153266

Keywords

economic power dispatch; photovoltaic (PV); particle swarm optimization; co-optimization; energy management system

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This paper focuses on the requirement for the integration of power plants due to the cyclical rise in electrical energy consumption. An optimization problem is formulated to minimize the operational cost while meeting network constraints and ensuring economic power dispatch and energy management system co-optimization. The developed particle swarm optimization method effectively reduces cost and improves self-consumption ratio.
The requirement for the integration of power plants due to the cyclical rise in electrical energy consumption is due to the fluctuating load demand experienced with the current grid systems. This integration necessitates effectively allocating loads to the power plants for a minimum grid-tied transmission line cost, while meeting the network constraints. In this paper, we formulate an optimization problem of minimizing the total operational cost of all committed plants transmitted to the grid, while also meeting the network constraints and ensuring economic power dispatch (EPD) and energy management system co-optimization. The developed particle swarm optimization (PSO) method resolves the optimization problem using a piecewise quadratic function to describe the operational cost of the generation units, and the B coefficient approach is employed to estimate the transmission losses. Intelligent adjustments are made to the acceleration coefficients, and a brand-new algorithm is suggested for distributing the initial power values to the generation units. The developed economic power dispatch strategy successfully demonstrated an imperative cost reduction, with a connected load of 850 MW, 1263 MW, and 2630 MW of power demand, contrasted with previous PSO application cost values percentage, maximum yearly cost savings of (0.55%, 91.87), (46.55%, 3.78), and (73.86%, 89.10), respectively, and significant environmental benefits. The proposed co-optimization approach can significantly enhance the self-consumption ratio compared to the baseline method.

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