Elements of unit commitment problems
There are many different UC problems, as the electrical system is structured and governed differently across the world. Common elements are: * A ''time horizon'' along which the decisions have to be made, sampled at a finite number of ''time instants''. This is usually one or two days, up to a week, where instants are usually hours or half-hours; less frequently, 15 or 5 minutes. Hence, time instants are typically between 24 and around 2000. * A set of ''generating units'' with the corresponding energy production cost and/or emission curves, and (complex) technical constraints. * A representation of the significant part of the '' grid network''. * A (forecasted) '' load profile'' to be satisfied, i.e., the net amount of energy to be delivered to each node of the grid network at each time instant. * Possibly, a set of ''reliability constraints''M. Shahidehpour, H. Yamin, and Z. Li. ''Market Operations in Electric Power Systems: Forecasting, Scheduling, and Risk Management'', Wiley-IEEE Press, 2002. ensuring that demand will be satisfied even if some unforeseen events occur. * Possibly, ''financial and/or regulatory conditions''C. Harris. ''Electricity markets: Pricing, structures and Economics'', volume 565 of The Wiley Finance Series. John Wiley and Sons, 2011. (energy revenues, market operation constraints, financial instruments, ...). The decisions that have to be taken usually comprise: * ''commitment decisions'': whether a unit is producing energy at any time instant; * ''production decisions'': how much energy a unit is producing at any time instant; * ''network decisions'': how much energy is flowing (and in which direction) on each branch of the transmission and/or distribution grid at any given time instant. While the above features are usually present, there are many combinations and many different cases. Among these we mention: * whether the units and the grid are all handled by a Monopolistic Operator (MO),A.J. Conejo and F.J. Prieto. ''Mathematical programming and electricity markets'', TOP 9(1):1–53, 2001. or a separate Transmission System Operator (TSO) manages the grid providing fair and not discriminatory access to Generating Companies (GenCos) that compete to satisfy the production on the (or, most often, several interconnected) energy market(s); * the different kinds of energy production units, such as thermal/nuclear ones, hydro-electric ones, and renewable sources (wind, solar, ...); * which units can be ''modulated'', i.e., their produced energy can be decided by the operator (albeit subject to the technical constraints of the unit), as opposed to it being entirely dictated by external factors such as weather conditions; * the level of detail at which the working of theManagement objectives
The objectives of UC depend on the aims of the actor for which it is solved. For a MO, this is basically to ''minimize energy production costs'' while satisfying the demand; reliability and emissions are usually treated as constraints. In a free-market regime, the aim is rather to ''maximize energy production profits'', i.e., the difference between revenues (due to selling energy) and costs (due to producing it). If the GenCo is a ''price maker'', i.e., it has sufficient size to influence market prices, it may in principle perform ''strategic bidding''A.K. David, F. Wen. ''Strategic bidding in competitive electricity markets: a literature survey'' In Proceedings IEEE PES Summer Meeting 4, 2168–2173, 2001. in order to improve its profits. This means bidding its production at high cost so as to raise market prices, losing market share but retaining some because, essentially, there is not enough generation capacity. For some regions this may be due to the fact that there is not enough grid network capacity to import energy from nearby regions with available generation capacity.T. Peng and K. Tomsovic. ''Congestion influence on bidding strategies in an electricity market'', IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 18(3):1054–1061, August 2003. While the electrical markets are highly regulated in order to, among other things, rule out such behavior, large producers can still benefit from simultaneously optimizing the bids of all their units to take into account their combined effect on market prices.A.J. Conejo, J. Contreras, J.M. Arroyo, S. de la Torre. ''Optimal response of an oligopolistic generating company to a competitive pool-based electric power market'', IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 17(2):424–430, 2002. On the contrary, ''price takers'' can simply optimize each generator independently, as, not having a significant impact on prices, the corresponding decisions are not correlated.J.M. Arroyo, A.J. Conejo. ''Optimal response of a thermal unit to an electricity spot market'', IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 15(3):1098–1104, 2000.Types of production units
In the context of UC, generating units are usually classified as: * Thermal units, which includeElectrical grid models
There are three different ways in which the energy grid is represented within a UC: * In the ''single bus approximation'' the grid is ignored: demand is considered to be satisfied whenever total production equals total demand, irrespective of their geographical location. * In the ''DC approximation'' only Kirchhoff's current law is modeled; this corresponds to reactive power flow being neglected, the voltage angles differences being considered small, and the angle voltage profile being assumed constant; * In the ''full AC model'' the complete Kirchhoff laws are used: this results in highly nonlinear and nonconvex constraints in the model. When the full AC model is used, UC actually incorporates the optimal power flow problem, which is already a nonconvex nonlinear problem. Recently, the traditional "passive" view of the energy grid in UC has been challenged. In a ''fixed'' electrical network currents cannot be routed, their behavior being entirely dictated by nodal power injection: the only way to modify the network load is therefore to change nodal demand or production, for which there is limited scope. However, a somewhat counter-intuitive consequence of Kirchhoff laws is that interrupting a line (maybe even a congested one) causes a global re-routing of electrical energy and may therefore ''improve'' grid performances. This has led to defining the ''Optimal Transmission Switching problem'',E.B. Fisher, R.P. O'Neill, M.C. Ferris. ''Optimal transmission switching'', IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 23(3):1346–1355, 2008. whereby some of the lines of the grid can be dynamically opened and closed across the time horizon. Incorporating this feature in the UC problem makes it difficult to solve even with the DC approximation, even more so with the full AC model.K.W. Hedman, M.C. Ferris, R.P. O’Neill, E.B. Fisher, S.S. Oren. ''Co-optimization of generation unit commitment and transmission switching with ''n'' − 1 reliability'', IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 25(2):1052–1063, 2010.Uncertainty in unit commitment problems
A troubling consequence of the fact that UC needs be solved well in advance to the actual operations is that the future state of the system is not known exactly, and therefore needs be estimated. This used to be a relatively minor problem when the ''uncertainty'' in the system was only due to variation of users' demand, which on aggregate can be forecasted quite effectively,E.A. Feinberg, D. Genethliou. ''Load Forecasting'', in Applied Mathematics for Restructured Electric Power Systems, J.H. Chow, F.F. Wu, and J. Momoh eds., Springer, 269–285, 2005H. Hahn, S. Meyer-Nieberg, S. Pickl. ''Electric load forecasting methods: Tools for decision making'', European Journal of Operational Research 199(3), 902–907, 2009 and occurrence of lines or generators faults, which can be dealt with by well established rules ( spinning reserve). However, in recent years the production from intermittent renewable production sources has significantly increased. This has, in turn, very significantly increased the impact of uncertainty in the system, so that ignoring it (as traditionally done by taking average point estimates) risks significant cost increases.A. Keyhani, M.N. Marwali, and M. Dai. ''Integration of Green and Renewable Energy in Electric Power Systems'', Wiley, 2010. This had made it necessary to resort to appropriate mathematical modeling techniques to properly take uncertainty into account, such as: * Robust optimization approaches; * Scenario optimization approaches; * Chance-constrained optimization approaches. The combination of the (already, many) traditional forms of UC problems with the several (old and) new forms of uncertainty gives rise to the even larger family of ''Uncertain Unit Commitment'' (UUC) problems, which are currently at the frontier of applied and methodological research.Integrated Transmission and Distribution Models
One of the major issues with the real-time unit commitment problem is the fact that the electricity demand of the transmission network is usually treated as a "load point" at eachSee also
*References
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*A description of the role of unit commitment problems in the overall context of power system management can be found in the