Title :
Residential energy demand management in smart grids
Author :
Oviedo, Raul J Martinez ; Fan, Zhong ; Gormus, Sedat ; Kulkarni, Parag ; Kaleshi, Dritan
Author_Institution :
CCR, Univ. of Bristol, Bristol, UK
Abstract :
This paper studies a coordination mechanism based on heuristic rules to manage the energy demand in a residential smart grid scenario and evaluates the survivability of the system when failures occur in the communication infrastructure. This is achieved by modeling residential demand response considering Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs) as part of the loads, local renewable generation capability and variable energy pricing based on a Time of Use (TOU) scheme. A mathematical model of the system is built based on realistic data, and the evaluation of the survivability of the system is carried out using Monte Carlo simulations and statistical experiment design techniques, where the probability of overloading the distribution system is derived for different scenarios. Results obtained show that the coordination mechanism is able to achieve energy efficiency and cost saving for residential users when the energy consumption is managed properly. At the same time the probability of overloading the distribution system can be reduced. The efficiency and economic savings depend on the potential of renewable sources in the region considered and the survivability of the system depends on a reliable communication infrastructure.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; electric vehicles; energy conservation; energy consumption; energy management systems; power distribution economics; pricing; probability; smart power grids; Monte Carlo simulations; PHEV; TOU scheme; communication infrastructure; coordination mechanism; distribution system overloading probability; economic savings; energy consumption; energy efficiency; local renewable generation capability; mathematical model; plug-in hybrid electric vehicles; renewable energy sources; residential demand response modeling; residential energy demand management; residential smart grid; statistical experiment design techniques; time of use scheme; variable energy pricing; Batteries; Home appliances; Mathematical model; Smart grids; Smart homes; Wind speed; Wind turbines; PHEV; Smart grid; heuristics; home energy management;
Conference_Titel :
Transmission and Distribution Conference and Exposition (T&D), 2012 IEEE PES
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1934-8
Electronic_ISBN :
2160-8555
DOI :
10.1109/TDC.2012.6281573