Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price

abstract: This thesis presents an overview of the calculation and application of locational marginal prices in electric power systems particularly pertaining to the distribution system. The terminology proposed is a distribution locational marginal price or DLMP. The calculation of locational proces...

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Other Authors: Steffan, Nicholas (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
LMP
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17938
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-17938
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-179382018-06-22T03:03:59Z Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price abstract: This thesis presents an overview of the calculation and application of locational marginal prices in electric power systems particularly pertaining to the distribution system. The terminology proposed is a distribution locational marginal price or DLMP. The calculation of locational process in distribution engineering is conjectured and discussed. The use of quadratic programming for this calculation is proposed and illustrated. A small four bus test bed exemplifies the concept and then the concept is expanded to the IEEE 34 bus distribution system. Alternatives for the calculation are presented, and approximations are reviewed. Active power losses in the system are modeled and incorporated by two different methods. These calculation methods are also applied to the 34 bus system. The results from each method are compared to results found using the PowerWorld simulator. The application of energy management using the DLMP to control load is analyzed as well. This analysis entails the use of the DLMP to cause certain controllable loads to decrease when the DLMP is high, and vice-versa. Tests are done to illustrate the impact of energy management using DLMPs for residential, commercial, and industrial controllable loads. Results showing the dynamics of the loads are shown. The use and characteristics of Matlab function FMINCON are presented in an appendix. Dissertation/Thesis Steffan, Nicholas (Author) Heydt, Gerald T (Advisor) Hedman, Kory (Committee member) Karady, George (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Electrical engineering Distribution Electricity Markets Electric Power Energy Systems LMP eng 61 pages M.S. Electrical Engineering 2013 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17938 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
Distribution
Electricity Markets
Electric Power
Energy Systems
LMP
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Distribution
Electricity Markets
Electric Power
Energy Systems
LMP
Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
description abstract: This thesis presents an overview of the calculation and application of locational marginal prices in electric power systems particularly pertaining to the distribution system. The terminology proposed is a distribution locational marginal price or DLMP. The calculation of locational process in distribution engineering is conjectured and discussed. The use of quadratic programming for this calculation is proposed and illustrated. A small four bus test bed exemplifies the concept and then the concept is expanded to the IEEE 34 bus distribution system. Alternatives for the calculation are presented, and approximations are reviewed. Active power losses in the system are modeled and incorporated by two different methods. These calculation methods are also applied to the 34 bus system. The results from each method are compared to results found using the PowerWorld simulator. The application of energy management using the DLMP to control load is analyzed as well. This analysis entails the use of the DLMP to cause certain controllable loads to decrease when the DLMP is high, and vice-versa. Tests are done to illustrate the impact of energy management using DLMPs for residential, commercial, and industrial controllable loads. Results showing the dynamics of the loads are shown. The use and characteristics of Matlab function FMINCON are presented in an appendix. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.S. Electrical Engineering 2013
author2 Steffan, Nicholas (Author)
author_facet Steffan, Nicholas (Author)
title Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
title_short Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
title_full Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
title_fullStr Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
title_full_unstemmed Applications and Calculation of a Distribution Class Locational Marginal Price
title_sort applications and calculation of a distribution class locational marginal price
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.17938
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