Frontiers in Energy Research (Nov 2023)
A two-stage distributed optimization method for home energy management systems via multi-modal data-driven algorithm
Abstract
The home energy management system (HEMS), which utilizes multi-modal data from multiple sensors to generate the knowledge about decision making, is essential to the optimization of home energy management efficiency. Load scheduling based on HEMS can improve the utilization efficiency of multi-modal data and derived knowledge, achieve power supply-demand balance, and reduce users’ electricity costs. This paper proposes a distributed load optimization scheduling method for the load scheduling problem in HEMS based on multi-modal data-driven algorithm. Additionally, a two-stage data-driven optimization method is proposed, including a first-stage optimization model based on minimizing electricity costs and a second-stage optimization model based on minimizing system load fluctuations. In the first stage, cost self-optimization is performed based on energy storage devices. In the second stage, a load optimization instruction is issued by the control center, and each user optimizes the load fluctuations based on the system load data. Compared to centralized control methods, this approach reduces the computational overhead of the control center. Finally, simulation experiments based on load scheduling in the HEMS are conducted. The results of the first optimization stage show that when the battery capacity integrated into the system increases from 3.68 kWh to 6.68 kWh, user costs can be reduced from 57.572 cents to 42.064 cents. It is not only evident that the proposed method can effectively save users on electricity costs, but the introduction of larger capacity batteries also lowers these costs. The second stage of load fluctuation optimization results show that the proposed method can effectively optimize the usage data of a group of users and decrease the absolute peak-valley difference by 8.8%.
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