DocumentCode :
112422
Title :
Vehicle-to-Grid Control for Supplementary Frequency Regulation Considering Charging Demands
Author :
Hui Liu ; Zechun Hu ; Yonghua Song ; Jianhui Wang ; Xu Xie
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Inf. Eng., Jiangsu Univ., Zhenjiang, China
Volume :
30
Issue :
6
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Nov. 2015
Firstpage :
3110
Lastpage :
3119
Abstract :
Electric vehicles (EVs) as distributed storage devices have the potential to provide frequency regulation services due to the fast adjustment of charging/discharging power. In our previous research, decentralized vehicle-to-grid (V2G) control methods for EVs were proposed to participate in primary frequency control. In this paper, our attention is on bringing a large number of EVs into the centralized supplementary frequency regulation (SFR) of interconnected power systems. An aggregator is the coordinator between EVs and the power system control center. The aggregator calculates the total frequency regulation capacity (FRC) and expected V2G (EV2G) power of EVs based on the data communicated between the aggregator and individual EVs or EV charging stations. With FRC and EV2G power, a V2G control strategy is proposed for the aggregator to dispatch regulation requirements to EVs and EV charging stations. In individual EV charging stations, the FRC is calculated on the basis of the V2G power at present time, and EV2G power is presented considering both frequency regulation and charging demands. Besides, V2G control strategies are developed to distribute regulation requirements to each EV. Simulations on an interconnected power grid based on a practical power grid in China have demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed strategies.
Keywords :
electric vehicles; frequency control; power system interconnection; secondary cells; China; EV charging stations; charging/discharging power; distributed storage devices; electric vehicles; frequency regulation capacity; power grid; power systems; vehicle-to-grid control; Automatic generation control; Charging stations; Electric vehicles; Frequency control; Power grids; Charging demand; electric vehicle (EV); frequency regulation capacity (FRC); supplementary frequency regulation (SFR); vehicle-to-grid (V2G);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-8950
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPWRS.2014.2382979
Filename :
7000595
Link To Document :
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