Integration of Clean and Sustainable Energy Resources and Storage in Multigeneration Systems: Design, Modeling, and Robust Optimization

Author(s):  
Fatih Yilmaz ◽  
Yunus Emre Yuksel ◽  
Murat Ozturk
Micromachines ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 138
Author(s):  
Hee-Seok Kim

Advanced energy conversion and storage systems have attracted much attention in recent decades due to the increasing demand for energy and the environmental impacts of non-sustainable energy resources [...]


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Kaminski ◽  
Philip Odonkor

Abstract The decreasing cost of implementation and increasing regulatory incentive to lower energy use have led to an increased adoption of distributed energy resources in recent years. This increased adoption has been further fueled by a surge in energy consciousness and the expansion of energy-saving products and technologies. To lower reliance on the electrical grid and fully realize the benefits of distributed energy resources, many consumers have also elected to use battery systems to store generated energy. For owners of multiple buildings, or multiple owners willing to share the operational cost, building clusters may be formed to more effectively take advantage of these distributed resources and storage systems. The implementation of these systems in existing buildings introduces the question of what makes a “good” building cluster. Furthermore, the scalable nature of distributed energy sources and storage systems create countless possibilities for system configuration. Through comparison of unique two-building clusters from a stock of five buildings with a given distributed energy resource (in this case, a solar photovoltaic panel array) and energy storage system, we develop a fundamental understanding of the underlying factors that allow building clusters to be less reliant on the utility grid and make better use of energy generation and storage systems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Selvakumar Karuppiah ◽  
Velu Duraisamy ◽  
Sakkarapalayam Murugesan Senthil Kumar

Electrocatalytic water splitting into oxygen and hydrogen is related to the utilization of non-renewable energy resources significantly and leads to sustainable energy infrastructure. The highly efficient bifunctional catalysts for oxygen...


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Borchiellini ◽  
M. Calì ◽  
M. Santarelli

Abstract In the paper the authors analyse how the application of an extended environomic procedure, based on charges linked to the pollutant activities of energy systems, influences the energy behaviour of energy systems. If in the economic balance of an energy plant a cost is assigned only to the pollutant emissions (Environmental Cost), it can be shown that this choice allows a good promotion of the abatement devices and of the switching fuel approach, but the efficient utilization of energy resources is not sufficiently promoted. The extended approach, here analysed, takes into account both the pollutant emissions and the inefficient use of energy resources. In the proposed method, on the basis of thermodynamic considerations, a cost is assigned to the exergy rate destroyed inside the system and to the exergy flows rejected into the biosphere with the plant wastes (Efficiency Penalty). Many calculations have been developed using different sets of both the Environmental Cost and the Efficiency Penalty; assigning different weights to them. The calculations have been applied to a 30 MWel gas turbine cogeneration power plant (CGAM), and to an existing 350 MW combined cycle, considering the pollutant emissions of CO, NOx, SOx and CO2. The obtained results show that this approach can become a real energy policy instrument: in fact it allows to stimulate high efficiency design of conventional plants and advanced high-efficiency low-pollutant energy systems, becoming an opportunity to disseminate advanced technologies that still have difficulties to compete in the energy market due to their high investment costs.


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