Title :
A Conceptual Study on Solar PV Cities for 21st Century
Author :
Kurokawa, Kosuke
Author_Institution :
Tokyo Univ. of Agric. & Technol.
Abstract :
According to Japan\´s R&D roadmap "PV2030", a base-case scenario is showing that the mass deployment of 100GW PV aggregation will supply 10 % of national electricity up to 2030. About a half of this PV installation is assumed to be brought still from residential roof-top applications. In such a state, PV penetration will reach almost 100 % in the majority of urban areas. Since the classical grid formation approach does not seems to be a good solution to deal with this issue, the author has already proposed "Autonomy-Enhanced PV Clusters (AE-PVC)" to realize a less dependent PV aggregation on the existing power grids in conjunction with grid power electronics and battery stations. Main contents are: (i) Case studies for residential towns and cities, (ii) Town grids mainly composed of massive residential PVs by considering fluctuating supply and demand; bidirectional power flows; daily cycle and irregular components; autonomous and distributed control of town grid; necessity of battery stations or controllable power sources; own frequency and voltage, (iii) Inter-grid coordination by autonomous and distributed principle: interconnection through national grids with power producers; inter-town interconnections; asynchronous power routers and so on
Keywords :
building integrated photovoltaics; load flow; power grids; power system control; power system economics; supply and demand; Japan; PV aggregation; PV installation; PV2030; asynchronous power routers; autonomous control; autonomy-enhanced PV clusters; battery stations; bidirectional power flows; distributed control; grid power electronics; inter-grid coordination; inter-town interconnections; power grids; residential roof-top applications; solar PV cities; supply-and-demand; urban areas; Batteries; Bidirectional power flow; Cities and towns; Distributed control; Power electronics; Power grids; Research and development; Supply and demand; Urban areas; Voltage control;
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Energy Conversion, Conference Record of the 2006 IEEE 4th World Conference on
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0017-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0017-1
DOI :
10.1109/WCPEC.2006.279628