Title :
Digital Grid: Communicative Electrical Grids of the Future
Author :
Abe, Rikiya ; Taoka, Hisao ; McQuilkin, David
Author_Institution :
Advantage Partners Socio-Strategic Investment Lab., Univ. of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
To support a high penetration of intermittent solar and wind power generation, many regions are planning to add new high capacity transmission lines. These additional transmission lines strengthen grid synchronization, but will also increase the grid´s short circuit capacity, and furthermore will be very costly. With a highly interconnected grid and variable renewable generation, a small grid failure can easily start cascading outages, resulting in large scale blackout. We introduce the “digital grid,” where large synchronous grids are divided into smaller segmented grids which are connected asynchronously, via multileg IP addressed ac/dc/ac converters called digital grid routers. These routers communicate with each other and send power among the segmented grids through existing transmission lines, which have been repurposed as digital grid transmission lines. The digital grid can accept high penetrations of renewable power, prevent cascading outages, accommodate identifiable tagged electricity flows, record those transactions, and trade electricity as a commodity.
Keywords :
AC-DC power convertors; DC-AC power convertors; power system interconnection; power transmission lines; power transmission planning; smart power grids; solar power stations; IP addressed AC-DC-AC converter; cascading outage; communicative electrical grid; digital grid router; digital grid transmission line; grid synchronization; interconnected grid; intermittent solar power generation; large scale blackout; renewable generation; short circuit capacity; small segmented grid failure; trade electricity; wind power generation; Energy storage; Europe; IP networks; Power grids; Power transmission lines; Renewable energy resources; BTB; IP address; Smart grid; ac/dc/ac converters; power electronics; renewable energy; solar; transmission lines;
Journal_Title :
Smart Grid, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSG.2011.2132744