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00-Organization of The Course-Class - ONE - LECTURE

This document provides an overview of the EE451/551 Wind Energy course taught by Professor Baosen Zhang at the University of Washington. It outlines how to contact the professor, required textbooks and resources, the course website, grading policy, prerequisites, course outcomes, and topics to be covered over the term including introductions to wind power and turbines, aerodynamics, statistics, generators, power systems operations, economics, storage, and dealing with uncertainty. Power is defined and units are provided.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views

00-Organization of The Course-Class - ONE - LECTURE

This document provides an overview of the EE451/551 Wind Energy course taught by Professor Baosen Zhang at the University of Washington. It outlines how to contact the professor, required textbooks and resources, the course website, grading policy, prerequisites, course outcomes, and topics to be covered over the term including introductions to wind power and turbines, aerodynamics, statistics, generators, power systems operations, economics, storage, and dealing with uncertainty. Power is defined and units are provided.

Uploaded by

haashill
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37

EE451/551 Wind Energy

Baosen Zhang

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington

1
How to contact me?

• Office: EE M310
• Office hours:
– Wednesdays 3:30-4:30 pm
– By appointment (send me an email with EE
451/551 in the subject)
• Email: zhangbao@uw.edu

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


2
Textbooks

• No required textbook
• Reference: Wind Energy: An Introduction

70 of course material in here

Lots of mistakes in the book

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


3
Other resources

• Wood & Wollenberg, Power System


Generation, Operation & Control
• Glover, Overbye, Sarma, Power system
analysis and design
EE 454

© 2021 B. Zhang and the University of Washington


4
Website
http://zhangbaosen.github.io/teaching/EE451
Use the course website:
• To check for announcements
• To get copies of the lecture slides and other material
• To get the homework and project assignments

Canvas site: https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1431517


• Grading, homework submission

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


5
Grading

• Homework: 40%
• Midterm: 30%
• Final Examination: 30%
The final grade will take into account the fact
that there are both undergraduate and graduate
students in the class
We will make COVID related adjustment if
needed

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


6
Policy

• Exams (midterm and final):


– Take home, open to all technologies
– No communication between each other
• Midterm: Middle of Feb
• Final: March 12
A 15 Tue
• Homework
– Weakly homework
– Discussions are fine, write your own solutions

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


7
Programming

• There are a lot of optimization software out


there, we just require basic calculations

solve for X
e.g
Ax b
oxo b 5 1
A
a function
graph
e
g pix x t e t fogy
© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington
8
Prerequisites

• Ideals
Thingy you should know
– Energy Systems (e.g., active, reactive power)
– Matrix algebra (e.g., inverse)
– Circuits (e.g., Ohm’s law)
• Useful, but not required
– Probability
– Power flow

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


9
Course Outcomes
• Explain what how is electrical power obtained from wind
• Perform basic calculations for wind power based on wind
turbine characteristics and terrain
• Explain what are the main considerations for wind power
integration
• Develop basic operating planning tools to accommodate wind
and solar power in power grids
• Discuss the main methods used to allocate recourse to
accommodate wind power uncertainty and variability
• Using storage in power systems
Electricpfer star
wind't device
authclass
© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington
10
Topics

III Time

turbine Fin integration

1910 2010 more open

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


11
Topics

1. Introduction
1. Introduction to the electrical grid
2. Overview of wind power

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


12
Turbine

2. Aerodynamics of Wind Turbines Wind Speed


1. Wind Turbine Blades
2. Coefficient of Performance
3. Separation of Wind Turbines

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


13
Statistics

3. Wind/solar Statistics Average Variance and


Standard Deviation
1. Cumulative Distribution Function
2. Probability Density Function
3. Dependency and Repeatability

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


14
Inside the Turbine

4. Overview of Wind Turbines


– Classification of Wind Turbines
– Types of Generators
– Speed of Rotation
– Power Conversion
– Control Actions
– Types of Wind Turbines

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


15
Generator

5. Induction Generator
– Description of the induction machine
– Mathematical representation of the machine

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


16
Generator

6. Synchronous Generator
– Description of the Synchronous Generator
– Salient Pole Synchronous Generator
– Cylindrical Rotor Synchronous Generator

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


17
Power System Operations

7. Operation of Power Systems


– Goals of power system operation
– Time dependent operating states
reliabilits cost

sustainability

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


18
Economics

8. Economic Dispatch
– Static system
– Wind and solar?
– Storage?

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


19
Storage

8. Storing Energy
– Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS)
– BESS operation and degradation
– Value of the BESS

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


20
Randomness

10. Commitment with Recourse


– Why is recourse needed?
– Stochastic Unit Commitment
– Interval Unit Commitment

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


21
Introduction

• This course is about wind energy and its


conversion to electricity
• Components of typical power system:
– Supply sources: source of power
– Load sinks: consumes power
– Transmission system: transmits power

w
© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington
22
Circuit Representations
of wind turbine
different types
induction generator

iii
afar
syn gen

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


671 23
Power

• Power is the rate at which energy is


transferred, used, or transformed
• Power units: J/s=Watts (W)
– Watts = volts × amperes turbines MW
wind
103 W sawn 15mW
KW a

106W 10 kW nuclear powergem


MW
u 26W

ANAvg US power consumption 500GW

Aug person I kw
© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington
24
Energy

• Energy: integration of power over time


E Spit It
• Units:
– Joules = watt x second (J)
– kWh s awh
– Btu = 1055 J

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


25
The Electrical Grid

500,000 miles
of high voltage
lines
20,000 generators
increase

120million loads
increase
Managing Complexity

• Idealized systems have no redundancy, so the


power system would not work if any
component fails
• Things fail in the grid
• Build the grid such that it would tolerate
failures (N-1 secure)

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


27
Wind/Solar

• Wind and solar makes things more interesting


intermittent
stochastic
economics

techan'ical

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


28
Example: BPA (Pacific Northwest)

wind

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


29
Typical Wind Patterns
speed

power

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


predict
30
Why Wind and Solar?

• Sustainability is one of the major challenges in


the next several decades
• Robust to other factors…

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


31
Wind Production (2015)

By Aflafla1 - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,


https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=77601151
© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington
32
Renewable Goal

currentstat

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


33
Generation Mix
60 emission source

emission hydro

169

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


34
US Transmission System

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


35
Summary

• A redo of the national grid is probably not


going to happen
• Better operations: accommodate stochastic
wind power better
• First step: understand how electricity is
generated from wind

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


36
Wind vs. Solar

• We will cover how wind power is generated


• They are different technologies
• Forecasting typically require different
algorithms
• A lot of integration issues are common, and
what we cover will be applicable to both

© 2021 B. Zhang & University of Washington


37

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