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"POWER SUPPLIES"
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Integrated life-cycle assessment of electricity-supply scenarios confirms global environmental benefit of low-carbon technologies
by
Bouman, Evert A.
,
Hertwich, Edgar G.
,
Suh, Sangwon
in
Air pollution
,
Carbon dioxide
,
Carbon Dioxide - chemistry
2015
Decarbonization of electricity generation can support climate-change mitigation and presents an opportunity to address pollution resulting from fossil-fuel combustion. Generally, renewable technologies require higher initial investments in infrastructure than fossil-based power systems. To assess the tradeoffs of increased up-front emissions and reduced operational emissions, we present, to our knowledge, the first global, integrated life-cycle assessment (LCA) of long-term, wide-scale implementation of electricity generation from renewable sources (i.e., photovoltaic and solar thermal, wind, and hydropower) and of carbon dioxide capture and storage for fossil power generation. We compare emissions causing particulate matter exposure, freshwater ecotoxicity, freshwater eutrophication, and climate change for the climate-change-mitigation (BLUE Map) and business-as-usual (Baseline) scenarios of the International Energy Agency up to 2050. We use a vintage stock model to conduct an LCA of newly installed capacity year-by-year for each region, thus accounting for changes in the energy mix used to manufacture future power plants. Under the Baseline scenario, emissions of air and water pollutants more than double whereas the low-carbon technologies introduced in the BLUE Map scenario allow a doubling of electricity supply while stabilizing or even reducing pollution. Material requirements per unit generation for low-carbon technologies can be higher than for conventional fossil generation: 11–40 times more copper for photovoltaic systems and 6–14 times more iron for wind power plants. However, only two years of current global copper and one year of iron production will suffice to build a low-carbon energy system capable of supplying the world's electricity needs in 2050.
Significance Life-cycle assessments commonly used to analyze the environmental costs and benefits of climate-mitigation options are usually static in nature and address individual power plants. Our paper presents, to our knowledge, the first life-cycle assessment of the large-scale implementation of climate-mitigation technologies, addressing the feedback of the electricity system onto itself and using scenario-consistent assumptions of technical improvements in key energy and material production technologies.
Journal Article
Designing control loops for linear and switching power supplies : a tutorial guide
by
Basso, Christophe P.
in
Design and construction
,
Electric current converters
,
Feedback control systems
2012
Loop control is an essential area of electronics engineering that today's professionals need to master. Rather than delving into extensive theory, this practical book focuses on what you really need to know for compensating or stabilizing a given control system. You can turn instantly to practical sections with numerous design examples and ready-made formulas to help you with your projects in the field. You also find coverage of the underpinnings and principles of control loops so you can gain a more complete understanding of the material. This authoritative volume explains how to conduct analysis of control systems and provides extensive details on practical compensators. It helps you measure your system, showing how to verify if a prototype is stable and features enough design margin. Moreover, you learn how to secure high-volume production by bench-verified safety margins.
Power Outages and Community Health: a Narrative Review
by
Fukurai, Mihoka
,
Kiang, Mathew V.
,
Hernández, Diana
in
Aging (natural)
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2020
Purpose of Review
Power outages, a common and underappreciated consequence of natural disasters, are increasing in number and severity due to climate change and aging electricity grids. This narrative review synthesizes the literature on power outages and health in communities.
Recent Findings
We searched Google Scholar and PubMed for English language studies with titles or abstracts containing “power outage” or “blackout.” We limited papers to those that explicitly mentioned power outages or blackouts as the exposure of interest for health outcomes among individuals living in the community. We also used the reference list of these studies to identify additional studies. The final sample included 50 articles published between 2004 and 2020, with 17 (34%) appearing between 2016 and 2020. Exposure assessment remains basic and inconsistent, with 43 (86%) of studies evaluating single, large-scale power outages. Few studies used spatial and temporal control groups to assess changes in health outcomes attributable to power outages. Recent research linked data from electricity providers on power outages in space and time and included factors such as number of customers affected and duration to estimate exposure.
Summary
The existing literature suggests that power outages have important health consequences ranging from carbon monoxide poisoning, temperature-related illness, gastrointestinal illness, and mortality to all-cause, cardiovascular, respiratory, and renal disease hospitalizations, especially for individuals relying on electricity-dependent medical equipment. Nonetheless the studies are limited, and more work is needed to better define and capture the relevant exposures and outcomes. Studies should consider modifying factors such as socioeconomic and other vulnerabilities as well as how community resiliency can minimize the adverse impacts of widespread major power outages.
Journal Article
Systems, automation & control
\"The book elaborates selected, extended and peer reviewed papers from the International Conference on Power Electrical Systems held in Mahdia, Tunisia in 2015. Main Topics are: multivariable -, nonlinear-, stochastic-, and robust control, robotics and mechatronics, synthesis of automation systems.\"-- Provided by Publisher.
Grid converters for photovoltaic and wind power systems
by
Teodorescu, Remus
,
Liserre, Marco
,
Rodriguez, Pedro
in
Electric current converters
,
Equipment and supplies
,
Photovoltaic power systems
2011,2010
Advancements in grid converter technology have been pivotal in the successful integration of renewable energy. The high penetration of renewable energy systems is calling for new more stringent grid requirements. As a consequence, the grid converters should be able to exhibit advanced functions like: dynamic control of active and reactive current injection during faults, and grid services support. <p>This book explains the topologies, modulation and control of grid converters for both photovoltaic and wind power applications. In addition to power electronics, coverage focuses on the specific applications in photovoltaic and wind power systems where grid condition is an essential factor.</p> <p>With a review of the most recent grid requirements for photovoltaic and wind power systems, the relevant issues are discussed:</p> <ul> <li> <div>Modern grid inverter topologies for photovoltaic and wind turbines</div> </li> <li> <div>Islanding detection methods for photovoltaic systems</div> </li> <li> <div>Synchronization techniques based on second order generalized integrators (SOGI)</div> </li> <li> <div>Advanced synchronization techniques with robust operation under grid unbalance condition</div> </li> <li> <div>Resonant controller techniques for current control and harmonic compensation</div> </li> <li> <div>Grid filter design and active damping techniques</div> </li> <li> <div>Power control under grid fault conditions, considering both positive and negative sequences</div> </li> </ul> <p>Throughout, the authors include practical examples, exercises, and simulation models and an accompanying website sets out further modeling techniques using MATLAB® and Simulink environments and physical security information management (PSIM) software.</p> <p><i>Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems</i> is intended as a course book for graduate students with a background in electrical engineering and for professionals in the evolving renewable energy industry. For professors interested in adopting the course, a set of slides is available for download from the website.</p> <p><b>Companion Website</b></p> <p><a href=\"http://www.wiley.com/go/grid_converters\">www.wiley.com/go/grid_converters</a></p>
Voltage-Sourced Converters in Power Systems
by
Yazdani, Amirnaser
,
Iravani, Reza
in
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
,
Computing and Processing
,
Control
2010
Presents Fundamentals of Modeling, Analysis, and Control of Electric Power Converters for Power System ApplicationsElectronic (static) power conversion has gained widespread acceptance in power systems applications; electronic power converters are increasingly employed for power conversion and conditioning, compensation, and active filtering. This book presents the fundamentals for analysis and control of a specific class of high-power electronic convertersthe three-phase voltage-sourced converter (VSC). Voltage-Sourced Converters in Power Systems provides a necessary and unprecedented link between the principles of operation and the applications of voltage-sourced converters. The book: Describes various functions that the VSC can perform in electric power systems Covers a wide range of applications of the VSC in electric power systemsincluding wind power conversion systems Adopts a systematic approach to the modeling and control design problems Illustrates the control design procedures and expected performance based on a comprehensive set of examples and digital computer time-domain simulation studiesThis comprehensive text presents effective techniques for mathematical modeling and control design, and helps readers understand the procedures and analysis steps. Detailed simulation case studies are included to highlight the salient points and verify the designs. Voltage-Sourced Converters in Power Systems is an ideal reference for senior undergraduate and graduate students in power engineering programs, practicing engineers who deal with grid integration and operation of distributed energy resource units, design engineers, and researchers in the area of electric power generation, transmission, distribution, and utilization.