Multi-Energy-Microgrid Energy Management Strategy Optimisation Using Deep Learning
Renewable power generation is unpredictable due to its intermittency, making grid-connected microgrids difficult to operate, control, and manage. Currently used prediction models for electricity, heat, gas, and hydrogen multi-energy complementary microgrids with the carbon trading mechanism are inef...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
MDPI AG
2025-06-01
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| Series: | Energies |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/18/12/3111 |
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| Summary: | Renewable power generation is unpredictable due to its intermittency, making grid-connected microgrids difficult to operate, control, and manage. Currently used prediction models for electricity, heat, gas, and hydrogen multi-energy complementary microgrids with the carbon trading mechanism are inefficient as they cannot account for all eventualities and are not well studied. Therefore, a two-stage robust optimisation model based on Bidirectional Temporal Convolutional Networks (BiTCN) and Transformer prediction for electricity, heat, gas, and hydrogen multi-energy complementary microgrids with a carbon trading mechanism is proposed to solve this problem. First, BiTCN extracts implicit wind speed and wind power output sequences from historical data and feeds it into the Transformer model for point prediction using the attention mechanism. Ablation computation modelling is then performed. The proposed prediction model’s Mean Absolute Error (MAE) is found to be 1.3512, and its R<sup>2</sup> is 0.9683, proving its efficacy and reliability. Second, the proposed model is used to perform interval prediction in two typical scenarios: high wind power and low wind power. After constructing the robust optimisation model uncertainty set based on the prediction results, simulation experiments are performed on the proposed optimisation model. The simulation results suggest that the proposed optimisation model enhances renewable energy use, emissions reductions, microgrid operating costs, and system reliability. The study also reveals that the total system cost and carbon emission cost in the low wind scenario are 283% (2.83 times) and 314% (3.14 times) higher than in the high wind scenario; hence, a significant percentage of renewable energy is needed for microgrid stability. |
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| ISSN: | 1996-1073 |