Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems

Huge potential exists for an integrated solar thermal system that connects several solar thermal plants at various locations to a single centralized energy generation (CEG) system network to meet the demand for heat from various businesses. Effective energy management via optimization has become cru...

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Published in:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Main Author: Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183526993&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106106&partnerID=40&md5=cbb508f87fe0822e9ffee29f461fc5fe
id 2-s2.0-85183526993
spelling 2-s2.0-85183526993
Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
2023
Chemical Engineering Transactions
106

10.3303/CET23106106
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183526993&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106106&partnerID=40&md5=cbb508f87fe0822e9ffee29f461fc5fe
Huge potential exists for an integrated solar thermal system that connects several solar thermal plants at various locations to a single centralized energy generation (CEG) system network to meet the demand for heat from various businesses. Effective energy management via optimization has become crucial to increase economic competitiveness, provide more cost-effective energy services, and reduce environmental impacts. Planning and energy management issues include linking every user to a distributed energy resource, a third-party monopoly, and the limited ability of distributed energy resources to compete on pricing and services and set their trading price. The use of locally produced energy is encouraged, and a Peer-to-peer (P2P) competitive energy system is suggested to balance supply and demand. P2P interactions at a larger distribution level are utilized to determine the optimal trading price for an integrated solar thermal system by addressing the financial mechanism. The economic optimization amongst P2P network participants was assessed in terms of the net present value (NPV) and the levelized cost of heat (LCOH). The proposed energy network can enable the model to evaluate transactions, prevent monopolies, and ease access to new distributed energy providers. To demonstrate the suggested approach, a case study of a decentralised competitive heating system at a distribution level is presented. Model simulations were then run to confirm the logic and potential value of the proposed design. In the results, a series of sensitivity analyses were undertaken to investigate the magnitude of the effect of the parameter variation on cost calculation. Simulation findings indicate a minimum solar radiation level of 1,800 kWh/m2, a discount rate below 10 %, a lifetime beyond 15 years, and an optimal trading price of 336 USD/m2 gross for the system acquisition cost. The study found LCOH with positive NPV values between 55 and 82 MYR/MWh . Hot water trade prices from an integrated solar thermal system can be enhanced by 40 % of the LCOH compared to conventional production. All of these results suggest that an integrated solar thermal system in this context could be promising. © 2023, AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC
22839216
English
Article

author Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
spellingShingle Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
author_facet Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
author_sort Ismail M.I.; Yunus N.A.; Hashim H.
title Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
title_short Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
title_full Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
title_fullStr Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
title_full_unstemmed Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
title_sort Peer-to-Peer Control Strategy for the Optimal Trading Price of Integrated Solar Thermal Systems
publishDate 2023
container_title Chemical Engineering Transactions
container_volume 106
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.3303/CET23106106
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183526993&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106106&partnerID=40&md5=cbb508f87fe0822e9ffee29f461fc5fe
description Huge potential exists for an integrated solar thermal system that connects several solar thermal plants at various locations to a single centralized energy generation (CEG) system network to meet the demand for heat from various businesses. Effective energy management via optimization has become crucial to increase economic competitiveness, provide more cost-effective energy services, and reduce environmental impacts. Planning and energy management issues include linking every user to a distributed energy resource, a third-party monopoly, and the limited ability of distributed energy resources to compete on pricing and services and set their trading price. The use of locally produced energy is encouraged, and a Peer-to-peer (P2P) competitive energy system is suggested to balance supply and demand. P2P interactions at a larger distribution level are utilized to determine the optimal trading price for an integrated solar thermal system by addressing the financial mechanism. The economic optimization amongst P2P network participants was assessed in terms of the net present value (NPV) and the levelized cost of heat (LCOH). The proposed energy network can enable the model to evaluate transactions, prevent monopolies, and ease access to new distributed energy providers. To demonstrate the suggested approach, a case study of a decentralised competitive heating system at a distribution level is presented. Model simulations were then run to confirm the logic and potential value of the proposed design. In the results, a series of sensitivity analyses were undertaken to investigate the magnitude of the effect of the parameter variation on cost calculation. Simulation findings indicate a minimum solar radiation level of 1,800 kWh/m2, a discount rate below 10 %, a lifetime beyond 15 years, and an optimal trading price of 336 USD/m2 gross for the system acquisition cost. The study found LCOH with positive NPV values between 55 and 82 MYR/MWh . Hot water trade prices from an integrated solar thermal system can be enhanced by 40 % of the LCOH compared to conventional production. All of these results suggest that an integrated solar thermal system in this context could be promising. © 2023, AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
publisher Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC
issn 22839216
language English
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