Energy Management System in Naval Submarines

abstract: An optimal energy scheduling procedure is essential in an isolated environment such as naval submarines. Conventional naval submarines include diesel-electric propulsion systems, which utilize diesel generators along with batteries and fuel cells. Submarines can charge the batteries by run...

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Other Authors: Jeon, Byeongdoo (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57048
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-570482020-06-02T03:01:11Z Energy Management System in Naval Submarines abstract: An optimal energy scheduling procedure is essential in an isolated environment such as naval submarines. Conventional naval submarines include diesel-electric propulsion systems, which utilize diesel generators along with batteries and fuel cells. Submarines can charge the batteries by running diesel-electric generators only at the surface or at snorkeling depth. This is the most dangerous time for submarines to be detectable by acoustic and non-acoustic sensors of enemy assets. Optimizing the energy resources while reducing the need for snorkeling is the main factor to enhance underwater endurance. This thesis introduces an energy management system (EMS) as a supervisory tool for the officers onboard to plan energy schedules in order to complete various missions. The EMS for a 4,000-ton class conventional submarine is developed to minimize snorkeling and satisfy various conditions of practically designed missions by optimizing the energy resources, such as Lithium-ion batteries, Proton-exchange membrane fuel cells, and diesel-electric generators. Eventually, the optimized energy schedules with the minimum snorkeling hours are produced for five mission scenarios. More importantly, this EMS performs deterministic and stochastic operational scheduling processes to provide secured optimal schedules which contains outages in the power generation and storage systems. Dissertation/Thesis Jeon, Byeongdoo (Author) Hedman, Mojdeh Khorsand (Advisor) Holbert, Keith E (Committee member) Wu, Meng (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Energy Naval engineering Electrical engineering Energy management system Operational scheduling Power systems Snorkel Submarine Underwater eng 105 pages Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57048 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Energy
Naval engineering
Electrical engineering
Energy management system
Operational scheduling
Power systems
Snorkel
Submarine
Underwater
spellingShingle Energy
Naval engineering
Electrical engineering
Energy management system
Operational scheduling
Power systems
Snorkel
Submarine
Underwater
Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
description abstract: An optimal energy scheduling procedure is essential in an isolated environment such as naval submarines. Conventional naval submarines include diesel-electric propulsion systems, which utilize diesel generators along with batteries and fuel cells. Submarines can charge the batteries by running diesel-electric generators only at the surface or at snorkeling depth. This is the most dangerous time for submarines to be detectable by acoustic and non-acoustic sensors of enemy assets. Optimizing the energy resources while reducing the need for snorkeling is the main factor to enhance underwater endurance. This thesis introduces an energy management system (EMS) as a supervisory tool for the officers onboard to plan energy schedules in order to complete various missions. The EMS for a 4,000-ton class conventional submarine is developed to minimize snorkeling and satisfy various conditions of practically designed missions by optimizing the energy resources, such as Lithium-ion batteries, Proton-exchange membrane fuel cells, and diesel-electric generators. Eventually, the optimized energy schedules with the minimum snorkeling hours are produced for five mission scenarios. More importantly, this EMS performs deterministic and stochastic operational scheduling processes to provide secured optimal schedules which contains outages in the power generation and storage systems. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2020
author2 Jeon, Byeongdoo (Author)
author_facet Jeon, Byeongdoo (Author)
title Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
title_short Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
title_full Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
title_fullStr Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
title_full_unstemmed Energy Management System in Naval Submarines
title_sort energy management system in naval submarines
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57048
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