DocumentCode
3100252
Title
Microgrid Infrastructure Modeling for Residential Microgrids
Author
Cox, Daniel J.
Author_Institution
Coll. of Comput., Eng. & Constr., North Florida Univ., Jacksonville, FL
fYear
2007
fDate
24-28 June 2007
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
Utility system vulnerabilities to multiple failures and the potential for such failures will increase as demand grows, utility plants are forced to add units at suboptimum locations, and transmission capacity lags the population growth. Microgrids have the advantage of allowing better recovery from disasters as well as to boost utility system performance. By being placed close to the load, the microgrid can be switched into and out of the transmission system. It can also operate independently from the rest of the system for a period of time. This affects the workflow of the disaster recovery and can also alter the economic impact to the utility and the utility´s customers. Modeling these system interactions in terms of case study examples demonstrates the potential benefits of using microgrids to improve power delivery and expansion of utility grids within urban areas and the methods of implementing them.
Keywords
distributed power generation; power distribution faults; power grids; disaster recovery workflow; microgrid infrastructure modeling; residential microgrids; utility system vulnerabilities; Distributed control; Power distribution; Power generation; Power generation economics; Power system economics; Power system reliability; Power system security; Power systems; Robustness; System performance; distributed control; distributed generation; microgrids; neighborhood design;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Engineering Society General Meeting, 2007. IEEE
Conference_Location
Tampa, FL
ISSN
1932-5517
Print_ISBN
1-4244-1296-X
Electronic_ISBN
1932-5517
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PES.2007.386020
Filename
4275786
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