C.1.2.-12. Unbalanced Operation of Integrated Power Distribution System For Optimal Energy Fow Using LSO vCANNs Approach-1
C.1.2.-12. Unbalanced Operation of Integrated Power Distribution System For Optimal Energy Fow Using LSO vCANNs Approach-1
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-024-05121-3
Abstract
The integrated energy distribution system (IEDS) integrates the natural gas, thermal, and
electrical networks at the distribution level. Because of its high cost and complicated
operation of the imbalanced electrical distribution network, the load flow problem of the
IEDS was disregarded in the operation of integrated energy distribution systems (IESs).
This paper focuses on the operation optimization of IEDSs by introducing a novel hybrid
approach for an unbalanced operation of the power distribution system for optimal energy
flow. The proposed hybrid approach is the combination of Light Spectrum Optimizer
(LSO) and Viscoelastic Constitutive Artificial Neural Networks vCANNs commonly
named as LSO-vCANNs approach. LSO is utilized to optimize the load flow of the unbal-
anced radial distribution electrical network. vCANN is used to predict the energy flow of
natural gas and heat networks. The aim of the paper is to minimize the total operation cost
the most cost-effective way to distribute energy across the integrated system while meet-
ing demand and network constraints. The proposed model is implemented in the MAT-
LAB platform and compared to different existing approaches like teaching–learning based
optimization algorithm (TLBO), particle swarm optimization (PSO), and deep neural net-
works (DNN). The cost of the system using the proposed method is 20$ which is lower,
and the computational time is 0.8 s which is lower than the existing methods. This sug-
gests that adopting the proposed methodology could lead to improved performance and
efficiency in energy distribution operations.
1 Introduction
1.1 Background
The IEDS is defined as a distribution-level network that integrates networks for electric-
ity, heat, and natural gas. CHP units, heat pumps, boilers, and gas-fired energy sources are
all included in the IEDS model, which interconnects distribution systems for natural gas,
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