Do you want to explore how the electric power system and their markets can change from today's dominant day ahead optimised system to tomorrow's dominant real-time adaptive optimised system? If you are eager to work on a fundamentally new system operations methodology that utilizes the available flexibility in order to increase the hosting capacity of the medium and high-voltage network, and that can be implemented practically, then this is your opportunity.Due to the increase in volatile renewable energy production and easy controllable electricity demand (electric vehicles, heat pumps) the power flows become more fluctuating and less predictable. Due to these uncertainties, day-ahead prognoses for network operation need to contain significant safety-margins. This means that not all network capacity will be used effectively.
The goal of the RESONATE project is to investigate how the network can be operated in real-time and adaptive to minimize the required safety margins and use the available network capacity as efficiently as possible. The project will define prerequisites for the implementation of real-time system operations and develop an appropriate system architecture for TSO and DSO. Real-time system operations uses available network capacity more efficiently than is possible in the present paradigm. It therefore will be possible to connect more customers to the network when real-time becomes the dominant system operation methodology.
This research position will focus on the system operation 'rules' and 'controls' to maintain the system balance, system security and integrity under dominant adaptive real-time control and the resulting impact on the energy market design. The research leads to the development of suitable control algorithms and a system architecture to enable an integral real-time operation of both the transmission and distribution network. It will be investigated which controllable sources are present in which network and how much flexibility they offer for adaptive system stability in their local or other networks. Suitable cross TSO-DSO control algorithms will be developed and simulated on real distribution and transmission networks. Finally a system architecture will be developed that can be implemented in the control centers of the participating network operators and which can be integrated in the energy markets. The impact and practical use of the framework and controls therefore also needs to be analyzed from a market design perspective.
You will contribute to the TKI project RESONATE of the
Electrical Energy Systems group.