2020
Autores
MansourLakouraj, M; Javadi, MS; Catalao, JPS;
Publicação
2020 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SMART ENERGY SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES (SEST)
Abstract
Increasing the penetration of renewable resources has aggravated the operational flexibility at distribution level. In this study, a flexibility-oriented scheduling of microgrids (MGs) is suggested to reduce the power fluctuations in distribution feeders caused by the high penetration of wind turbines (WTs) in MGs. A flexibility constraint as viable and practical solution is used in MG scheduling to address this challenge. The presented scheduling model, implemented using mixed integer linear programming (MILP) and a stochastic framework, exercises risk constraints to capture the uncertainties associated with wind turbines, loads and market prices. The effectiveness of the model is investigated on a MG with high penetration of WTs in the presence of demand response (DR) and energy storage systems (ESSs). Numerical studies show the influence of risk parameters' changing on operation costs. In addition, the flexibility constraint mitigates the sharp variation of the net load at distribution level, which improves the flexibility of the distribution system.
2020
Autores
Lucas, A; Pegios, K; Kotsakis, E; Clarke, D;
Publicação
Energies
Abstract
2020
Autores
Cimmino, A; Andreadou, N; Fernandez-Izquierdo, A; Patsonakis, C; Tsolakis, AC; Lucas, A; Ioannidis, D; Kotsakis, E; Tzovaras, D; Garcia-Castro, R;
Publicação
2020 International Conference on Smart Energy Systems and Technologies (SEST)
Abstract
2020
Autores
Rancilio, G; Merlo, M; Lucas, A; Kotsakis, E; Delfanti, M;
Publicação
2020 International Symposium on Power Electronics, Electrical Drives, Automation and Motion (SPEEDAM)
Abstract
2020
Autores
Palma, JMLM; Silva, CAM; Gomes, VC; Lopes, AS; Simoes, T; Costa, P; Batista, VTP;
Publicação
WIND ENERGY SCIENCE
Abstract
The digital terrain model (DTM), the representation of earth's surface at regularly spaced intervals, is the first input in the computational modelling of atmospheric flows. The ability of computational meshes based on high- (2 m; airborne laser scanning, ASL), medium- (10 m; military maps, Mil) and low-resolution (30 m; Shuttle Radar Topography Mission, SRTM) DTMs to replicate the Perdigao experiment site was appraised in two ways: by their ability to replicate the two main terrain attributes, elevation and slope, and by their effect on the wind flow computational results. The effect on the flow modelling was evaluated by comparing the wind speed, wind direction and turbulent kinetic energy using VENTOS (R)/2 at three locations, representative of the wind flow in the region. It was found that the SRTM was not an accurate representation of the Perdigao site. A 40m mesh based on the highest-resolution data yielded an elevation error of less than 1.4m and an RMSE of less than 2.5m at five reference points compared to 5.0m in the case of military maps and 7.6m in the case of the SRTM. Mesh refinement beyond 40m yielded no or insignificant changes on the flow field variables, wind speed, wind direction and turbulent kinetic energy. At least 40m horizontal resolution - threshold resolution based on topography available from aerial surveys is recommended in computational modelling of the flow over Perdigao.
2020
Autores
Felgueiras, F; Mourao, Z; Morais, C; Santos, H; Gabriel, MF; Fernandes, ED;
Publicação
ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Abstract
Elite swimmers and swimming pool employees are likely to be at greater health risk due to their regular and intense exposure to air stressors in the indoor swimming pool environment. Since data on the real long-term exposure is limited, a long-term monitoring and sampling plan (22 non-consecutive days, from March to July 2017) was carried out in an indoor Olympic-size pool with a chlorine-based disinfection method to characterize indoor environments to which people involved in elite swimming and maintenance staff may be exposed to. A comprehensive set of parameters related with comfort and environmental conditions (temperature, relative humidity (RH), carbon dioxide (CO2) and monoxide and ultrafine particles (UFP)) were monitored both indoors and outdoors in order to determine indoor-to-outdoor (I/O) ratios. Additionally, an analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOC) concentration and its dynamics was implemented in three 1-hr periods: early morning, evening elite swimmers training session and late evening. Samplings were simultaneously carried out in the air layer above the water surface and in the air surrounding the pool, selected to be representative of swimmers and coaches/employees' breathing zones, respectively. The results of this work showed that the indoor climate was very stable in terms of air temperature, RH and CO 2 . In terms of the other measured parameters, mean indoor UFP number concentrations (5158 pt/cm(3)) were about 50% of those measured outdoors whereas chloroform was the predominant substance detected in all samples collected indoors (13.0-369.3 mu g/m(3)), among a varied list of chemical compounds. An I/O non-trihalomethanes (THM) VOC concentration ratio of 2.7 was also found, suggesting that, beyond THM, other potentially hazardous VOC have also their source(s) indoors. THM and non-THM VOC concentration were found to increase consistently during the evening training session and exhibited a significant seasonal pattern. Compared to their coaches, elite swimmers seemed to be exposed via inhalation to significantly higher total THM levels, but to similar concentrations of non-THM VOC, during routine training activities. Regarding swimming employees, the exposure to THM and other VOC appeared to be significantly minimized during the early morning period. The air/water temperature ratio and RH were identified as important parameters that are likely to trigger the transfer processes of volatile substances from water to air and of their accumulation in the indoor environment of the swimming pool, respectively.
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