International Journal of Electrical Power & Energy Systems (Oct 2024)
Optimal planning of integrated electricity-natural gas distribution systems with hydrogen enriched compressed natural gas operation
Abstract
In future integrated electricity-natural gas distribution systems (IEGDS), hydrogen and methane converted from excessive renewable generation will be mixed with natural gas to form hydrogen enriched compressed natural gas (HCNG) for fewer carbon emissions. Consequently, optimal planning of the HCNG-integrated IEGDS plays an essential role in increasing the economy and technical benefits. However, integrating HCNG operation into the planning of IEGDS still has many challenges, such as unrealistic modeling, nonlinear constraints, and the potential risk of voltage violations. The purpose of this paper is to develop a tractable optimization model for planning and operation of the HCNG-integrated IEGDS, aiming to minimize the investment and operating cost, reduce the voltage violation, and improve the renewable power penetration rate. To achieve this, a bilevel optimization model is developed for optimal planning of wind turbines and soft open points (SOPs) in the IEGDS considering comprehensive HCNG operation, in which both hydrogen and methane injection are considered and optimized for different system operation scenarios. Furthermore, the proposed nonlinear model is reformulated to a tractable bilevel mixed-integer second-order cone model using several reformulation techniques and solved by the reformulation and decomposition algorithm. Case studies, performed using the publicly available datasets, are conducted to demonstrate the economic and technical improvement by implementing the proposed planning model. The annual planning results show that incorporating the coordination between SOPs and methane injection results in a 6.77% reduction in investment cost, a 22.64% reduction in operating cost, a 62.69% decrease in voltage violation, and a 23.58% increase in the wind power penetration rate. Moreover, SOPs are more applicable to the safe operation of the IEGDS under high energy load conditions.