DocumentCode
1817367
Title
Reward strategies for adaptive start-up scheduling of power plant
Author
Kamiya, Akimoto ; Kobayashi, Shigenobu ; Kawai, Icensuke
Author_Institution
Toshiba Corp., Japan
Volume
4
fYear
1997
fDate
12-15 Oct 1997
Firstpage
3417
Abstract
Power plant start-up scheduling is aimed at minimizing the start-up time while limiting maximum turbine-rotor stresses. A shorter start-up time reduces fuel and electricity consumption during the start-up process and increases its adaptability to changes in electricity demand. Online start-up scheduling increases the flexibility of power plant operation. The start-up scheduling problem can be formulated as a combinatorial optimization problem with constraints. This problem has a number of local optima with a wide and high-dimension search space. The optimal schedule lies somewhere near the boundary of the feasible space. To achieve an efficient and robust search model, we propose the use of an enforcement operator to focus the search along the boundary and other local search strategies such as the reuse function and tabu search used in combination with genetic algorithms (GAs). We also propose integrating GAs with reinforcement learning. During the search process, GAs would guide the learning toward the promising areas. Reinforcement learning can generate a good schedule in the earlier stage of the search process. After learning representative optimal schedules, the search performance virtually satisfies the goal of this research: to search for optimal or near-optimal schedules in 30 seconds. For industrial use, the design of a reward strategy is crucial. We show that (a) positive rewards succeed with both low and high-dimension reinforcement-learning output, and (b) negative rewards succeed only with low-dimension output. We present our proposed model with analysis and test results
Keywords
adaptive systems; combinatorial mathematics; genetic algorithms; learning (artificial intelligence); online operation; power consumption; power engineering computing; power plants; scheduling; search problems; starting; turbogenerators; combinatorial optimization; constraints; electricity consumption; electricity demand changes; enforcement operator; fuel consumption; genetic algorithms; high-dimension search space boundary; local optima; local search strategies; online adaptive power plant start-up scheduling; optimal schedules; power plant operation flexibility; reinforcement learning; reuse function; reward strategies; robust search model; start-up time minimization; tabu search; turbine-rotor stresses; Adaptive scheduling; Constraint optimization; Energy consumption; Fuels; Job shop scheduling; Learning; Optimal scheduling; Power generation; Robustness; Stress;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 1997. Computational Cybernetics and Simulation., 1997 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Orlando, FL
ISSN
1062-922X
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4053-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSMC.1997.633181
Filename
633181
Link To Document