Abstract:
With the high proliferation of solar power, curtailments and higher capacity reserves are
required for a reliable power system operation. However, system operators can tap into demand exibility
to maintain reliability affordably. Temperature-controlled loads (TCL) have higher exibility in demand
response due to their frequency of operation, power rating, and tolerance in the desired operating region.
In this study, a TCL demand exibility quanti cation is presented using temperature measurements and
consumer preferences, and predictions of TCL demand exibility and solar power generation are used to
improve demand response (DR) reliability. The utility can leverage predictions to issue DR requests considering
resource adequacy and operational costs. Consumers are formed as a virtually connected community, and
an aggregator facilitates the utility in providing situational intelligence and distributing DR requests among
consumers.Adistributed DR management framework is proposed based on demand exibility to (a) simplify
the optimization and (b) improve optimality. Typical results show power consumption reduction during peak
reduction and emergency DR requests and power consumption with low variability during capacity rming
requests compared to individual thermostat controls. Two indices to measure DR reliability and consumer
comfort are de ned, and results are presented for different DR requests.
Citation:
Pathiravasam, C., & Venayagamorthy, G. (2022). Distributed demand response management for a virtually connected community with solar power. IEEE Access, 10, 8350-8362. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3141772