IEEE Alt Energy 05-03-2012 Presentation
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Transcript IEEE Alt Energy 05-03-2012 Presentation
IEEE Alternate Energy Presentation
May 3, 2012
URS Corp., Southfield, MI
Michelle Rogers & Ian Hutt
Team Background
Michelle Rogers
Master’s student at Wayne State studying Civil &
Environmental Engineering
B.S. Chemical Engineering from Michigan State
Ian Hutt
Electric Engineer at Commonwealth Associates, Inc
Expertise in electrical power systems & power marketing
Team Background
Other Team Members:
Wayne State: Dr. Carol Miller, Dr. Caisheng Wang, Dr.
McElmurry, Tim Carter
Commonwealth Associates: Stephen Miller
TYJT: Awni Qaqish, Steve Jin, Carrie Smalley
Outline
Introduction to the project
How project was started
Purposes of development
How it works
LMP
Marginal Generating Unit
Emissions
Application for water distribution systems
Wider applications: household electricity use
HERO smartphone App
Introduction
Algorithm estimates real-time emissions based on
locational marginal price (LMP)
Started as a project for sustainable water delivery
Also has wider implications / uses
Why was this project started?
GLPF, Great Lakes Protection Fund grant
Grant title: “Real-Time System Optimization for
Sustainable Water Transmission and Distribution”
Purpose: minimize environmental impacts to the Great
Lakes
Optimize energy use in water system distribution
(pumping)
Why was this project started?
GLPF, Great Lakes Protection Fund grant
Became clear that emissions, not just energy use, was
the key in minimizing environmental impact
Not all energy use is equal (from emissions
standpoint)
Emissions vary with type of generation fuel
Depends on time and location
Applications
Not all energy use is equal (from emissions
standpoint)
Any power user that has ability to vary timing of energy
use could save emissions
Timing does not affect economics, but could still affect
emissions
Industrial or commercial users that have storage
capacity (like compressed air or pumps)
Methodology
Use LMP to predict the marginal fuel type
Calculate emissions associated with that fuel type for a
specific area
Locational Marginal Prices
LMPs available from MISO
(Midwest Independent System Operator)
LMPs for select Commercial Pricing Nodes (CPNs)
available every 5 minutes
Locational Marginal Prices
LMPs based on marginal cost of supplying the next
increment of electric demand at a specific location
LMP Accounts for:
generation marginal cost (fuel cost)
physical aspects of transmission system (constraint in
transmission lines)
Cost of marginal power losses
Locational Marginal Prices
Locational Marginal Prices
Locational Marginal Prices
Key Assumptions:
Any change in electricity use is small enough to not
affect generation mix
LMP cost takes into account electrical transmission
constraint
Model predicts the marginal unit type
Locational Marginal Prices
LMP Accounts for:
physical aspects of transmission system (constraint in
transmission lines)
Within a small focus area, can assume constraint in the
physical transmission system = ~ zero
Cost of marginal power losses
Assume marginal power losses = ~ zero
Generation marginal cost (fuel cost)
Left with LMP = ~ fuel cost
Locational Marginal Prices
Price ($/MWh)
LMP = ~ fuel cost
LMP at time ti
Hydro & Nuclear
Coal
Natural Gas
Oil
Fuel Prices
LMP = ~fuel cost
Find fuel price data (EIA – public sources)
Heat Rate (efficiency) of each plant:
Weighted average of monthly fuel price calculated from plant
fuel purchases
Cost of electric generation computed:
Fuel Prices
Get price ranges for Fuel types
For Example: DTE Power plants in SE Michigan
Marginal Fuel Type
Min LMP
Max LMP
Nuclear/Renewable
< $10
$10
Coal
$10
$50
Nat. Gas & RFO
$50
$180
Dist. Fuel Oil
$180
> $180
LMP Marginal Generator Type Air Emissions
Emission Rates
LMP Marginal Generator Type Air Emissions
Measured Air Emissions Data from EPA’s eGRID
(Emissions & Generation Resource Integrated Database)
Data on thousands of power plants in the US
Sort by EGCL code (Electric Generating Company,
Location-Based)
i.e., all of DTE-operated plants in SE Michigan
Emission Rates
Calculate average emission rate for entire area for each
fuel type
Example, Detroit Edison: (2008 data)
Air Emissions in pounds pollutant per MWhr generated (lb/MWh)
Pollutant
Nuclear
Coal
Natural Gas Distilled Fuel Oil
SO2
0
10.54
1.65
2.3445
NOX
0
3.05
1.57
21.73
CO2 equiv
0
2071
2292
1862
Hg
0
5.26E-05
3.62E-06
5.81E-06
Pb
1.09E-07
3.10E-05
1.66E-06
3.65E-05
LMP Marginal Generator Type Air Emissions
Application for water
distribution systems
GLPF Grant: “Real-Time System Optimization for
Sustainable Water Transmission and Distribution”
Emissions estimation algorithm used in optimization
program for pumping stations.
Two pilot water systems:
Hydraulic Model
Use EPANet hydraulic models
Input:
Pipe length
Pipe diameter
Demand at each node
Diurnal demand pattern
Pump power
Pump efficiency curves
Elevation
Tanks and reservoirs
Hydraulic Model
City of Monroe
Hydraulic Model
DWSD
Sustainable Water Transmission
Need to combine:
Hydraulic Model + Emissions Estimation Model
PEPSO: Pollutant Emissions Pump Station
Optimization
Uses hydraulic model to output optimized pumping
schedule
Optimization based on:
Emissions
Energy Cost
Pressure constraints in system
PEPSO Input: Load Hydraulic Model
PEPSO Input:
Load
Pressure
Monitoring
Nodes
PEPSO Input:
Select
Commercial
Pricing Nodes
(CPNs)
PEPSO Input:
Select
Pollutants of
Interest
PEPSO Output
Energy use per hour for each
pump station.
Pounds of pollutant
emissions per hour for
optimized operation of each
pump station.
Pressure violations, if any.
PEPSO Output
Sustainable Water Transmission
PEPSO will be used to evaluate many scenarios
High/low demand
Different pollutants
Availability of raised storage
Optimization based on cost vs. emissions
Use as a tool to make policy and operational
recommendations
Reaching a broader audience:
the HERO app
HERO = Home Emissions Read-Out
(LMP Marginal Generator Type Air Emissions)
Applying this concept to household energy use
App for smart phones
HERO
Uses location to determine marginal emissions
in real-time
Knowledge of current emissions empowers
consumers to reduce emissions just by
changing the timing of electricity use
HERO Input
HERO can automatically find
nearest CPN based on
phone’s GPS
User also has choice to pick
location from map
HERO Output
Current, Past, and Projected
Future emissions
CO2, NOX, SOX, Mercury,
Lead
HERO Output
User can view more to see
background information on
CO2, NOX, SOX, Mercury,
Lead
Environmental Effects,
Human Health Effects
Example: NOX & SOX
HERO Status
Still under development
Preliminary version should be finished in Fall
After small test audience makes
recommendations, fix all bugs, then beta
version release in Google Play App Store
Questions?