Biblio

Filters: Author is Arjen van der Meer  [Clear All Filters]
2018-09-30
Arjen van der Meer, Cornelius Steinbrink, Kai Heussen, Daniel E. Morales Bondy, Merkebu Z. Degefa, Filip Pröstl Andrén, Thomas Strasser, Sebastian Lehnhoff, Peter Palensky.  2018.  Design of experiments aided holistic testing of cyber-physical energy systems. 2018 Workshop on Modeling and Simulation of Cyber-Physical Energy Systems (MSCPES). :1–7.

The complex and often safety-critical nature of cyber-physical energy systems makes validation a key challenge in facilitating the energy transition, especially when it comes to the testing on system level. Reliable and reproducible validation experiments can be guided by the concept of design of experiments, which is, however, so far not fully adopted by researchers. This paper suggests a structured guideline for design of experiments application within the holistic testing procedure suggested by the European ERIGrid project. In this paper, a general workflow as well as a practical example are provided with the aim to give domain experts a basic understanding of design of experiments compliant testing.

Cornelius Steinbrink, Arjen van der Meer, Milos Cvetkovic, Davood Babazadeh, Sebastian Rohjans, Peter Palensky, Sebastian Lehnhoff.  2018.  Smart grid co-simulation with MOSAIK and HLA: a comparison study. Computer Science-Research and Development. 33:135–143.

Evaluating new technological developments for energy systems is becoming more and more complex. The overall application environment is a continuously growing and interconnected cyber-physical system so that analytical assessment is practically impossible to realize. Consequently, new solutions must be evaluated in simulation studies. Due to the interdisciplinarity of the simulation scenarios, various heterogeneous tools must be connected. This approach is known as co-simulation. During the last years, different approaches have been developed or adapted for applications in energy systems. In this paper, two co-simulation approaches are compared that follow generic, versatile concepts. The tool MOSAIK, which has been explicitly developed for the purpose of co-simulation in complex energy systems, is compared to the High Level Architecture (HLA), which possesses a domain-independent scope but is often employed in the energy domain. The comparison is twofold, considering the tools’ conceptual architectures as well as results from the simulation of representative test cases. It suggests that MOSAIK may be the better choice for entry-level, prototypical co-simulation while HLA is more suited for complex and extensive studies.

Arjen van der Meer, Peter Palensky, Kai Heussen, D. E. Morales Bondy, Oliver Gehrke, C. Steinbrinki, M Blanki, Sebastian Lehnhoff, Edmund Widl, Cyndi Moyo et al..  2017.  Cyber-physical energy systems modeling, test specification, and co-simulation based testing. Modeling and Simulation of Cyber-Physical Energy Systems (MSCPES), 2017 Workshop on. :1–9.

The gradual deployment of intelligent and coordinated devices in the electrical power system needs careful investigation of the interactions between the various domains involved. Especially due to the coupling between ICT and power systems a holistic approach for testing and validating is required. Taking existing (quasi-) standardised smart grid system and test specification methods as a starting point, we are developing a holistic testing and validation approach that allows a very flexible way of assessing the system level aspects by various types of experiments (including virtual, real, and mixed lab settings). This paper describes the formal holistic test case specification method and applies it to a particular co-simulation experimental setup. The various building blocks of such a simulation (i.e., FMI, mosaik, domain-specific simulation federates) are covered in more detail. The presented method addresses most modeling and specification challenges in cyber-physical energy systems and is extensible for future additions such as uncertainty quantification.

Cornelius Steinbrink, Sebastian Lehnhoff, Sebastian Rohjans, Thomas Strasser, Edmund Widl, Cyndi Moyo, Georg Lauss, Felix Lehfuss, Mario Faschang, Peter Palensky et al..  2017.  Simulation-Based Validation of Smart Grids–Status Quo and Future Research Trends. International Conference on Industrial Applications of Holonic and Multi-Agent Systems. :171–185.

Smart grid systems are characterized by high complexity due to interactions between a traditional passive network and active power electronic components, coupled using communication links. Additionally, automation and information technology plays an important role in order to operate and optimize such cyber-physical energy systems with a high(er) penetration of fluctuating renewable generation and controllable loads. As a result of these developments the validation on the system level becomes much more important during the whole engineering and deployment process, today. In earlier development stages and for larger system configurations laboratory-based testing is not always an option. Due to recent developments, simulation-based approaches are now an appropriate tool to support the development, implementation, and roll-out of smart grid solutions. This paper discusses the current state of simulation-based approaches and outlines the necessary future research and development directions in the domain of power and energy systems.

Panos Kotsampopoulos, Nikos Hatziargyriou, Thomas Strasser, Cyndi Moyo, Sebastian Rohjans, Cornelius Steinbrink, Sebastian Lehnhoff, Peter Palensky, Arjen van der Meer, D. E. Morales Bondy.  2017.  Validating Intelligent Power and Energy Systems–A Discussion of Educational Needs. International Conference on Industrial Applications of Holonic and Multi-Agent Systems. :200–212.

Traditional power systems education and training is flanked by the demand for coping with the rising complexity of energy systems, like the integration of renewable and distributed generation, communication, control and information technology. A broad understanding of these topics by the current/future researchers and engineers is becoming more and more necessary. This paper identifies educational and training needs addressing the higher complexity of intelligent energy systems. Education needs and requirements are discussed, such as the development of systems-oriented skills and cross-disciplinary learning. Education and training possibilities and necessary tools are described focusing on classroom but also on laboratory-based learning methods. In this context, experiences of using notebooks, co-simulation approaches, hardware-in-the-loop methods and remote labs experiments are discussed.