Projects: Projects for Investigator |
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Reference Number | EP/M016439/1 | |
Title | Analysis of Power Quality in Complex DC Power Networks | |
Status | Completed | |
Energy Categories | Other Power and Storage Technologies(Electricity transmission and distribution) 100%; | |
Research Types | Basic and strategic applied research 100% | |
Science and Technology Fields | ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) 100% | |
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation | Not Cross-cutting 100% | |
Principal Investigator |
Dr R Todd No email address given Electrical & Electronic Engineering University of Manchester |
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Award Type | Standard | |
Funding Source | EPSRC | |
Start Date | 30 June 2015 | |
End Date | 30 September 2016 | |
Duration | 15 months | |
Total Grant Value | £99,767 | |
Industrial Sectors | Energy | |
Region | North West | |
Programme | NC : Engineering | |
Investigators | Principal Investigator | Dr R Todd , Electrical & Electronic Engineering, University of Manchester (100.000%) |
Industrial Collaborator | Project Contact , Rolls-Royce PLC (0.000%) |
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Web Site | ||
Objectives | ||
Abstract | Protecting the environment for future generations to enjoy is a key priority for the international community. Emissions from all forms of transport systems, and land based power generation are being addressed by ambitious targets, such as decarbonising both the UK's road transport and power generation sectors by 2050 (A strategy for ultra-low emission vehicles in the UK, 2013, Dept. of Trans., & Delivering our low carbon future, 2011, HM Gov.), and the Flightpath 2050 target of a 75% reduction in CO2 emissions per passenger kilometre relative to an aircraft built in 2000 (Europe's vision for aviation, 2011, EU Comm.). A key challenge to achieving these targets is developing low carbon technologies, and this is being enthusiastically embraced by researchers, with power electronic based systems being widely proposed due to their high efficiency, controllability, flexibility and reliability. This high concentration of power electronic converters, often in small DC networks, can adversely affect system stability; power converters employ sophisticated control and protection functions which are sensitive to changes on the network, these changes can easily be triggered by normal operation of another power converter, and can result in another power converter unnecessarily going offline, which may compromise network security. This project aims to develop a fundamental understanding of power quality in complex DC power networks, and then examine a diverse range of real world scenarios to evaluate power quality using a 100kW DC power network demonstrator system. A key outcome of this project will be to enable systems which have high concentrations of power converters to be designed with confidence, enabling low carbon technologies to be fully exploited in future electric vehicles, aircraft and smart grids. | |
Data | No related datasets |
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Projects | No related projects |
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Publications | No related publications |
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Added to Database | 18/09/15 |