4.6 Article

A Virtual Power Plant Architecture for the Demand-Side Management of Smart Prosumers

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app8030432

Keywords

virtual power plant; demand-side management; energy management system; demand response; smart grid; urban energy system; distributed energy resources; multi-agent system

Funding

  1. Regione Lombardia under the Smart Cities and Communities [40545387]
  2. University of Brescia [Brescia 20-20-20]
  3. University of Brescia as part of the research activities of the eLUX laboratory-energy Laboratory as University eXpo

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In this paper, we present a conceptual study on a Virtual Power Plant (VPP) architecture for the optimal management of Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) owned by prosumers participating in Demand-Side Management (DSM) programs. Compared to classical VPP architectures, which aim to aggregate several DERs dispersed throughout the electrical grid, in the proposed VPP architecture the supervised physical domain is limited to single users, i.e., to single Points of Delivery (PODs) of the distribution network. The VPP architecture is based on a service-oriented approach, where multiple agents cooperate to implement the optimal management of the prosumer's assets, by also considering different forms of Demand Response (DR) requests. The considered DR schemes range from Price-Based DRs to Event-Based DRs, covering both the normal operating functions and the emergency control requests applied in modern distribution networks. With respect to centralized approaches, in this study the control perspective is moved from the system level to the single prosumer's level, who is allowed to independently provide flexible power profiles through the aggregation of multiple DERs. A generalized optimization model, formulated as a Mixed-Integer Linear Programming (MILP) problem, is also introduced. Such a model is able to compute the optimal scheduling of a prosumer's assets by considering both DR requests and end-users' requirements in terms of comfort levels while minimizing the costs.

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