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Tuesday, April 29, 2014
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Seminar

Planning and control of uncertain electric loads to help out the power grid

Johanna Mathieu
University of Michigan

Flexible electric loads can provide a variety of benefits to power systems, for example, increased reliability, reduced operational costs, and the ability to integrate larger amounts of intermittent renewable energy resources such as wind and solar power into the power grid. However, a key challenge is how to coordinate diverse distributed loads to achieve common objectives without greatly impacting their local functions and without costly investment in new infrastructure. In this talk, I will describe several methods we can use to plan/control aggregations of loads to provide services to power systems. Importantly, these methods deal with real-world load control issues including uncertainty and access to only partial information. First, I will describe how load curtailment can be formulated as a restless bandit problem, allowing us to derive index policies that help us choose the best loads to curtail in each time step, without perfect knowledge of the state of each load. Second, I will show how we can explicitly account for the uncertainty of aggregations of loads providing power system reserves in stochastic optimal power flow problems. This work is joint with Joshua Taylor, Maria Vrakopoulou, and Goran Andersson.

Johanna Mathieu is an assistant professor in the Department of EECS at the University of Michigan. She received her PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in 2012 and was a postdoc in the Power Systems Laboratory at ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Her research focuses on ways to reduce the environmental impact, cost, and inefficiency of electric power systems via new operational and control strategies, with an emphasis on demand response and energy storage.

Host: Scott Backhaus