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Aging-aware predictive control of PV-battery assets in buildings

Jie Cai, Hao Zhang and Xing Jin

Applied Energy, 2019, vol. 236, issue C, 478-488

Abstract: This paper presents an aging-aware model predictive control (MPC) approach for operation of sustainable buildings with on-site photovoltaic (PV) and battery systems. On-site batteries can be used to collect excess PV power during low demand hours and to discharge when PV generation is not enough to meet loads. To further increase the value of the PV-battery assets, batteries can be proactively charged/discharged to shed peak demands for utility cost reduction. The battery life span is highly dependent on the operation strategy and aggressive charge/discharge actions lead to faster battery capacity degradation and higher overall operation cost due to more frequent replacement. The control strategy developed in this study incorporates a convex battery capacity loss model, derived from a physically-based degradation model, to capture the battery aging cost in the control optimization. The degradation model used in the control optimization consists of a set of convex and piece-wise linear sub-models to approximate the battery degradation effect at different time instances. A convex MPC problem is solved in the proposed control strategy to seek the optimal balance between the building utility cost and the battery life-cycle cost. Whole month simulation tests were carried out for a typical office building with on-site PV and battery assets. To quantify the benefits of the proposed control approach, three baseline strategies were also simulated that represent the best current practices. Test results showed that conventional battery control strategies seeking minimum utility cost could double the battery degradation rate and lead to a significant increase in the battery life-cycle cost. The proposed strategy could foresee the tradeoff between the utility cost and battery aging cost and make decisions accordingly. It was demonstrated that the proposed control solution could reduce the utility cost by 9% with moderate battery degradation increase, leading to overall building operation cost reduction up to 4%.

Keywords: Model predictive control; Photovoltaic; Building energy storage; Battery-aging control (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (15)

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DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2018.12.003

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