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Impacts of random household participations on a transactive open energy market in residential microgrids

Version 2 2024-05-30, 15:56
Version 1 2018-12-24, 00:00
conference contribution
posted on 2024-05-30, 15:56 authored by MN Akter, MA Mahmud, Enamul HaqueEnamul Haque
The paper investigates the impacts of random household participations in a transactive open energy market (TOEM) in residential microgrids. The strategic decision making procedures of different households with diverse renewable energy portfolios are analyzed by formulating a non-cooperative game for neighborhood energy transactions. In the proposed TOEM, houses with energy excesses initiate the energy trading process while houses with energy shortages act as followers to meet their demands by purchasing energy at competitive prices. Moreover, there are flexibilities for participants for energy transactions in the TOEM, i.e., individual households are free either to participate or not. The impacts of random participations of different households for energy trading in residential microgrids with the TOEM are analyzed in this paper in terms of utilities of sellers and buyers. Several case studies are conducted using residential house level data for energy generations and consumptions by considering Australian scenarios in order to show how the proposed energy trading game achieves cost savings as well as how random participations of different households affect individual rationalities.

History

Related Materials

Location

Portland, Oregon

Language

eng

Publication classification

E Conference publication, E1 Full written paper - refereed

Pagination

1-5

Start date

2018-08-05

End date

2018-08-10

ISBN-13

9781538677032

Title of proceedings

PESGM 2018 : Proceedings of the 2018 IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting

Event

IEEE Power & Energy Society. General Meeting (2018 : Portland, Oregon)

Publisher

IEEE

Place of publication

Piscataway, N.J