In this paper, we exploit the inherent hierarchy of heat exchangers in District Heating and Cooling (DHC) networks and propose DReAM, a novel Demand Response (DR) architecture for Multi-level DHC networks. DReAM serves to economize system operation while still respecting comfort requirements of individual consumers. Contrary to many present day DR schemes that work on a consumer level granularity, DReAM works at a level of hierarchy above buildings, i.e. substations that supply heat to a group of buildings. This improves the overall DR scalability and reduce the computational complexity. In the first step of the proposed approach, mathematical models of individual substations and their downstream networks are abstracted into appropriately constructed low-complexity structural forms. In the second step, this abstracted information is employed by the utility to perform DR optimization that determines the optimal heat inflow to individual substations rather than buildings, in order to achieve the targeted objectives across the network. We validate the proposed DReAM framework through experimental results under different scenarios on a test network.
Revised: June 1, 2017 |
Published: May 19, 2017
Citation
Bhattacharya S., V. Chandan, V. Arya, and K. Kar. 2017.DReAM: Demand Response Architecture for Multi-level District Heating and Cooling Networks. In Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Future Energy Systems (e-Energy 2017), May 16-19, 2017 Shatin, Hong Kong, 353-359. New York, New York:ACM.PNNL-SA-126256.doi:10.1145/3077839.3084079