DocumentCode
3300040
Title
CHP optimized selection methodology for a multi-carrier energy system
Author
Sheikhi, Akram ; Mozafari, B. ; Ranjbar, A.M.
Author_Institution
Power Syst. & Energy, Sharif Univ. of Technol., Tehran, Iran
fYear
2011
fDate
19-23 June 2011
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
Today, the interest on distributed generation has been increasing, especially due to technical development on generation systems that meet environmental and energy policy concerns. One of the most important distributed energy technologies is Combined Heat and Power (CHP). CHP is small and self-contained electric generation plan that can provide power for household applications, commercial or industrial facilities and hence its applications are overtly increasing. It can reduce power loss and enhance service reliability in distribution systems. One of the influential factors for the users is the purchasing cost of CHP which is largely dependent on its type, capacity and efficiency. Therefore among all exciting of the commercial CHP technologies certain economic choices are to be taken into account. Cost-Benefit analysis is one of the famous approaches aiming at maximization of benefit-to-cost ratio. The proposed method in this paper determine the optimized size and efficiency of CHP for users by considering an integrated view of electricity and natural gas network based on the novel concept of energy hubs. The benefits of CHP placement described in this paper include power cost saving, power loss reduction, reliability enhancement and environmental considerations.
Keywords
cogeneration; cost-benefit analysis; distributed power generation; power generation economics; power generation planning; power generation reliability; CHP optimized selection methodology; benefit-to-cost ratio maximization; combined heat and power selection methodology; commercial facilities; cost-benefit analysis; distributed generation technology; distribution systems; energy policy; household applications; industrial facilities; multicarrier energy system; natural gas network; power cost saving; power loss reduction; self-contained electric generation plan; service reliability enhancement; Cogeneration; Couplings; Electricity; Natural gas; Planning; Reliability; Resistance heating; CO2 emission; benefit to cost analysis; combined heat and power; energy hub; optimal operation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
PowerTech, 2011 IEEE Trondheim
Conference_Location
Trondheim
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-8419-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-8417-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PTC.2011.6019291
Filename
6019291
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