scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Stand-alone power system

About: Stand-alone power system is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8650 publications have been published within this topic receiving 192397 citations. The topic is also known as: Stand-alone photovoltaic power system.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assessed renewable based electricity generation technologies against a range of sustainability indicators using data obtained from the literature and found that wind and small hydro are the most sustainable source for the electricity generation.
Abstract: The renewable based electricity generation technologies were assessed against a range of sustainability indicators using data obtained from the literature. These indicators are cost of electricity generation, greenhouse gas emissions and energy pay-back time. All the three parameters were found to have a very wide range for each technology. For grading different renewable energy sources a new figure of merit has been proposed, linking greenhouse gas emissions, energy pay-back time and cost of electricity generated by these renewable energy sources. It has been found out that wind and small hydro are the most sustainable source for the electricity generation.

257 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present various energy pay back time (EPBT) analyses of the solar PV system with reference to a fuel oil-fired steam turbine and their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and costs are also compared.

256 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an economic characterization of a wind system in which long-distance electricity transmission, storage, and gas turbines are used to supplement variable wind power output to meet a time-varying load.

256 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a comparative investigation of PV effect on system stability at different penetration levels is presented, where three different scenarios with their relevant dynamic models are considered, namely, distributed units, and centralized farms with and without voltage regulation capabilities.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative investigation of (PV) effect on system stability at different penetration levels. Three different scenarios with their relevant dynamic models are considered, namely, distributed units, and centralized farms with and without voltage regulation capabilities. Based on these models, the impact is examined through eigenvalue, voltage stability and transient stability analyses using real network data pertaining to Ontario and its neighboring systems. This impact is quantized in monetary terms based on the long run marginal cost of electricity production in Ontario. It is demonstrated that distributed solar PV generators are significantly more advantageous, from the stability point of view, than solar farms.

255 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the war of currents started in 1888 and George Westinghouse and Nikolai Tesla with the alternating current (ac) system were on one side and Thomas Edison and his dc distribution system on the other side.
Abstract: It has been over 100 years since Thomas Edison built the first direct current (dc) electricity supply system on 4 September 1882, at Pearl Street in New York City. Many prominent events occurred in the electricity supply industry after that. The first one, ?the war of currents,? started in 1888. Thomas Edison and his dc distribution system were on one side, and George Westinghouse and Nikolai Tesla with the alternating current (ac) system were on other side. The war ?ended? in about 1891 when ac won as the dominant power supply medium. The key behind the ac win was the invention of the transformer that could easily step up medium voltage to high and extra-high voltage for long-distance power transfer from a remote ac generation station to load centers hundreds of kilometers away with lower transmission losses. Transformers can also step down high voltage back to low voltage at load stations to supply the low-voltage equipment. Since the end of the war, ac power systems have been developed and expanded at a tremendous speed from the initial small isolated networks, with each supplying only lighting and motor loads with a few hundreds of customers, to its current scale of super interconnected networks each supplying billions of customers over large geographic areas in one or several countries. The voltage levels and capacities of transmission networks have increased from the first commercialized three-phase ac system with only 2.4 kV, 250 kW in the town of Redlands, California, United States, to the first commercial long-distance, ultra-high-voltage, ac transmission line in China with 1,000 kV, 2,000 MW. Transmission distance has been increased from several miles to over thousands of kilometers (miles). With such major achievements, it is little wonder that the ac power system became the top engineering achievement of the 20th century. Does this mean that dc is gone? The answer is an unambiguous no. What has happened in the past 50 years, such as applications of advanced control technologies in conventional power system loads, the power electronics based high-voltage dc (HVdc) transmission, and the additional renewable power sources in low-voltage distribution system, calls for a rethink about dc and ac in electricity supply systems.

254 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Electric power system
133K papers, 1.7M citations
93% related
Wind power
99K papers, 1.5M citations
91% related
Photovoltaic system
103.9K papers, 1.6M citations
88% related
Renewable energy
87.6K papers, 1.6M citations
87% related
Energy storage
65.6K papers, 1.1M citations
85% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202388
2022188
20213
20208
20196
201843