Researchers from North Carolina State University (NCSU) have developed a technique for "scheduling" energy in electric grids that moves away from centralized management by tapping into the distributed computing power of energy devices. The approach advances the smart grid concept by coordinating the energy being produced and stored by both conventional and renewable sources.

Currently, power infrastructure uses a centralized scheduling approach to forecast and coordinate the energy produced at power plants around the U.S. But as renewable energy systems are incorporated into the power grid, the infrastructure will need more advanced systems for tracking and coordinating more energy sources.

"A key challenge for renewable energy generated on-site—by home solar panels, for example—is determining how much of that energy needs to be stored on-site and how much can be shared with the larger grid," says Mo-Yuen Chow, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at NC State and senior author of a paper describing the new power scheduling technique.

The existing approaches to scheduling are highly centralized, with power plants sending data to a control center that crunches the numbers and then tells plants how much they will be expected to contribute to the grid.

"This approach doesn't scale up well, which is a problem when you consider the rapid growth of on-site renewable energy sources," says Navid Rahbari-Asr, a Ph.D. student at NCSU and lead author of the paper.

"The rise of on-site energy storage technologies presents an additional challenge, since that means energy can be stored for use at any time, making power scheduling calculations significantly more complex," Rahbari-Asr says. "In addition, the centralized approach is vulnerable. If the control center fails, the whole system falls apart."

To address these problems, the researchers developed technology that takes advantage of distributed computing power to replace the traditional control center with a decentralized approach.

"Our approach taps into the computational resources of each energy device," Rahbari-Asr says. By having each device communicate with its immediate neighbors, the device can calculate and schedule how much energy it will need to store, how much to contribute to the network and how much to draw from the network.

"Collectively, this distributed technique can determine the optimal schedule for the entire grid," Rahbari-Asr says.

The distributed technique would also help protect the privacy of home-owners and other power generators, because they would not be sharing their energy production, storage and consumption data with a control center.

The technology has been validated in simulations and the researchers are in the process of implementing it in an experimental smart grid system at the National Science Foundation FREEDM Systems Center on NCSU's campus.

The researchers hope to have experimental results to report in 2016.

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