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dc.contributor.authorOlasoji, Azeez O.es-ES
dc.contributor.authorOyedokun, David T.O.es-ES
dc.contributor.authorAdeyinka, Adebayo Victores-ES
dc.contributor.authorRajabdorri, Mohammades-ES
dc.contributor.authorSierra Aguilar, Juan Estebanes-ES
dc.contributor.authorAjayi-Obey, Akinolaes-ES
dc.contributor.authorAluko-Olokun, Pelumi Peteres-ES
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-30T04:39:07Z
dc.date.available2026-06-30T04:39:07Z
dc.date.issued2026-05-15es_ES
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11531/110939
dc.descriptionCapítulos en libroses_ES
dc.description.abstractHigh penetrations of converter-interfaced renewable energy sources (RES) are eroding synchronous inertia in many power systems, making frequency security a binding constraint in unit commitment (UC), especially for weak island grids. This paper develops an analytical frequency-constrained unit commitment (FCUC) formulation that (i) co-optimises synchronous inertia and synthetic inertia (SI) from wind power plants and (ii) supports both classical DC power-flow and PTDF-based linear sensitivity factor (LSF) network representations within a unified mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) framework. The frequency nadir constraints is enforced via a separable-programming approximation that remains fully MILP-compatible. The model is validated on the real La Palma island system. Results show that, under an unconstrained network (transmission-capacity factor TCF =1.0), varying the emulated inertia constant kem  between 0 s and 6 s has negligible impact on total cost, renewable spillage, and frequency-security indicators: RoCoF remains orders of magnitude below its limit and the nadir constraint is numerically binding in all cases. A comparison between DC and LSF formulations confirms that the LSF model closely reproduces the DC dispatch and frequency metrics while achieving smaller optimality gaps. A subsequent TCF evaluation shows that tightening transmission limits only becomes economically material at TCF=0.6, where costs rise and a small amount of RES curtailment appears, without compromising RoCoF or nadir security. Overall, the results demonstrate that SI from wind can be co-optimised with synchronous inertia and LSF-based transmission constraints in a single tractable FCUC model, providing a structured way to assess inertia provision, wind utilisation, and congestion management in low-inertia island grids.es-ES
dc.description.abstractHigh penetrations of converter-interfaced renewable energy sources (RES) are eroding synchronous inertia in many power systems, making frequency security a binding constraint in unit commitment (UC), especially for weak island grids. This paper develops an analytical frequency-constrained unit commitment (FCUC) formulation that (i) co-optimises synchronous inertia and synthetic inertia (SI) from wind power plants and (ii) supports both classical DC power-flow and PTDF-based linear sensitivity factor (LSF) network representations within a unified mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) framework. The frequency nadir constraints is enforced via a separable-programming approximation that remains fully MILP-compatible. The model is validated on the real La Palma island system. Results show that, under an unconstrained network (transmission-capacity factor TCF =1.0), varying the emulated inertia constant kem  between 0 s and 6 s has negligible impact on total cost, renewable spillage, and frequency-security indicators: RoCoF remains orders of magnitude below its limit and the nadir constraint is numerically binding in all cases. A comparison between DC and LSF formulations confirms that the LSF model closely reproduces the DC dispatch and frequency metrics while achieving smaller optimality gaps. A subsequent TCF evaluation shows that tightening transmission limits only becomes economically material at TCF=0.6, where costs rise and a small amount of RES curtailment appears, without compromising RoCoF or nadir security. Overall, the results demonstrate that SI from wind can be co-optimised with synchronous inertia and LSF-based transmission constraints in a single tractable FCUC model, providing a structured way to assess inertia provision, wind utilisation, and congestion management in low-inertia island grids.en-GB
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfes_ES
dc.language.isoen-GBes_ES
dc.publisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (Texas, Estados Unidos de América)es_ES
dc.rightses_ES
dc.rights.uries_ES
dc.sourceLibro: 10th IEEE Texas Power and Energy Conference - TPEC 2026, Página inicial: 1-6, Página final:es_ES
dc.subject.otherInstituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT)es_ES
dc.titleCo-Optimizing Synthetic and Synchronous Inertia in Frequency-Constrained Unit Commitment: A Case Study on La Palmaes_ES
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartes_ES
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiones_ES
dc.rights.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccesses_ES
dc.keywordsFrequency-constrained unit commitment (FCUC), synthetic inertia (SI), wind power, renewable energyes-ES
dc.keywordsFrequency-constrained unit commitment (FCUC), synthetic inertia (SI), wind power, renewable energyen-GB


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