Capacity Estimation of a Utility-Scale Lithium Ion Battery in an Autarchic Environment by Comparing two Different Battery Models
- Keywords
- autarchic community, Lithium ion battery, energy storage, renewables, regional system modelling
- Abstract
The autarchic communities are an attractive scenario that more and more local actors strive to achieve. In electricity autonomous cases a battery system stands as prerequisite to succeed renewables time shifting due to the intermittent nature of decentralized generation. In the present study the local autarky in the electricity sector is examined for a system composed of a photovoltaic installation, a wind farm, a biogas combined heat power plant and a battery. The selected storage system is a Lithium Ion battery and two different modelling alternatives have been applied. Consequently, the two system versions have been tested for three autonomous case study regions in north, central and south Germany. The system is subsequently operated, and the minimum battery capacity is estimated for each case study based on dynamic simulations. Simulation results indicate that the autarky in the electricity sector can be feasible, but the capacity is underestimated almost up to 30%, if the aging effect of the battery is neglected and the efficiency grade is considered steady. Moreover, outcomes show that the calculated battery capacity is higher for the south city due to the solar power variability as an outcome of the seasonal variation.
- Copyright
- © 2019, the Authors. Published by Atlantis Press.
- Open Access
- This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
Cite this article
TY - CONF AU - Stamatia Dimopoulou AU - Julia Kohl AU - Corinna Klapproth PY - 2019/11 DA - 2019/11 TI - Capacity Estimation of a Utility-Scale Lithium Ion Battery in an Autarchic Environment by Comparing two Different Battery Models BT - Proceedings of the 13th International Renewable Energy Storage Conference 2019 (IRES 2019) PB - Atlantis Press SP - 153 EP - 158 SN - 2589-4943 UR - https://www.atlantis-press.com/article/125923328 ID - Dimopoulou2019/11 ER -