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Journal article

Impact of thermostatically controlled loads' demand response activation on aggregated power: A field experiment

In Energy 2015, Volume 94, pp. 705-714
From

Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark2

Energy System Management, Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark3

Distributed Energy Resources, Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark4

This paper describes the impacts of different types of DR (demand response) activation on TCLs' (thermostatically controlled loads) aggregated power. The different parties: power system operators, DR service providers (or aggregators) and consumers, have different objectives in relation to DR activation.

The outcome of this experimental study quantifies the actual flexibility of household TCLs and the consequence for the different parties with respect to power behaviour. Each DR activation method adopts different scenarios to meet the power reduction, and has different impacts on the parameters. The experiments are conducted with real domestic refrigerators representing TCL.

Activating refrigerators for DR with a delay reduces the ISE (integral square error) in power limitation by 28.46%, overshoot by 7.69%. The delay in refrigerator activation causes reduction in power ramp down rate by 39.90%, ramp up rate by 21.30% and the instantaneous average temperature increases by 0.13% in comparison with the scenario without activation delay.

Language: English
Year: 2015
Pages: 705-714
ISSN: 18736785 and 03605442
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2015.11.050
ORCIDs: Marinelli, Mattia , Kosek, Anna Magdalena and Bindner, Henrik W.

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