Above, an AI-Grid prototype that is being built by the research team. Image courtesy
of Stony Brook Power Lab
By Daniel Dunaief
The Department of Energy is energized by the possibility of developing and enhancing
microgrids.
What are microgrids? They are autonomous local power systems that have small, independent
and often decentralized energy sources. Often, they use renewable energy, like wind
or solar power, although some use natural gas or diesel.
The DOE’s dedication to developing these microgrids may cut costs, create efficiencies
and enhance energy reliability.
Peng Zhang. Photo from SBU
Peng Zhang, SUNY Empire Innovation Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering at Stony Brook University, is leading a diverse team of researchers and
industry experts who received $5 million of a $50 million investment the DOE recently
made to developing, enhancing and improving microgrid technology.
Bringing together these energy experts, Zhang hopes to use artificial intelligence
to create a usable, reliable and efficient source of energy, particularly during periods
of power outages or disruption to the main source of energy.
“The traditional microgrid operation is based on models and human operators,” Zhang
said. “We developed this data-driven or AI-based approach.”
Artificial intelligence can enhance the safety and reliability of microgrids that
can receive and transmit power.
One of the objectives of the systems Zhang and his collaborators are developing will
include protecting the power supplies against faults, accidents from natural disasters
and cyberattacks.
“This project led by Professor Zhang is a great example demonstrating the impact of
this novel research on essential infrastructure that we rely on daily,” Richard Reeder,
Vice President for Research at Stony Brook University, said in a statement.
Zhang said he has verified the methods for this AI-driven approach in the lab and
in a simulation environment.
“Now, it’s time to demonstrate that in more realistic, microgrid settings,” he said.
He is working with microgrid representatives in Connecticut, Illinois and New York
City. His team will soon work with a few representative microgrids to establish a
more realistic testing environment.
The urgency to demonstrate the feasibility of this approach is high. “We need to kick
the project off immediately,” said Zhang, whose team is recruiting students, postdocs,
administrative staff and technicians to meet a two-year timeline.
The group hopes AI-grids can be used in different microgrids around the country. If
the platform is generic enough, it can have wide applications without requiring significant
modifications.
While operators of a microgrid might be able to know the ongoing status, they normally
are not able to respond to contingencies manually. “It’s impossible for the operator
to know the ongoing status” of power sources and power use that can change readily,
Zhang explained. “That’s why we had to rely on a data driven approach.”
Additionally, end users of electricity don’t necessarily want their neighbors to know
about their power needs. They may not want others who are using the same microgrid
system to know what appliances or hardware are in their homes.
Instead, the system will rely on the data collected within each microgrid, which reflects
the behavior at different intervals. Those energy needs can change, as people turn
on a TV or unplug a wind turbine.
At the same time, the power system load and generation need to remain in balance.
Microgrids that produce more energy than the system or end users need can send them
to a utility grid or to neighboring microds or communities. If they don’t send that
energy to others who might use it, they can lose some of that energy.
Power needs to be balanced between supply and demand. Storage systems can buffer an
energy imbalance, although the cost of such storage is still high. Researchers in
other departments at Stony Brook and Brookhaven National Laboratory are pursuing ways
to improve efficiencies and reduce energy storage costs.
Balancing energy is challenging in most microgrids, which rely on intermittent and
uncertain renewable energy sources such as sunlight. In this project, Zhang plans
to connect several microgrids together into a “mega microgrid system,” that can allow
any system with a surplus to push extra energy into one with a deficiency.
Microgrids aren’t currently designed to replace utilities. They may reduce electricity
bills during normal operations and can become more useful during emergencies when
supplies from utilities are lower.
While artificial intelligence actively runs the system, people are still involved
in these programmable microgrids and can override any recommendations.
In addition to having an alarm in the event that a system is unsafe or unstable, the
systems have controllers in place who can restore the system to safer functioning.
The programming is flexible enough to change to meet any utility needs that differ
from the original code.
In terms of cybersecurity, the system will have three lines of defense to protect
against hacking.
By scanning, the system can localize an attack and mitigate it. Even if a hacker disabled
one controller, the control function would pop up in a different place to replace
it, which would increase the cost for the attacker.
Stony Brook created a crypto control system. “If an attacker got into our system,
all the information would be useless, because he would not understand what this signal
is about,” Zhang said.
While he plans to publish research from his efforts, Zhang said he and others would
be careful in what they released to avoid providing hackers with information they
could use to corrupt the system.
For Zhang, one of the appeals of coming to Stony Brook, where he arrived two years
ago and was promoted last month to Professor from Associate Professor, was that the
university has one of the best and best-funded microgrid programs in the country.
Zhang feels like he’s settled into the Stony Brook community, benefiting from interacting
with his neighbors at home and with a wide range of colleagues at work. He appreciates
how top scholars at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard and national
labs have proactively approached Stony Brook to establish collaborations.
Zhang is currently discussing a Phase II collaboration on a microgrid project with
the Navy, which has funded his research since his arrival. “Given the federal support
[from the Navy], I was able to recruit top people in the lab,” he said, including
students from Columbia and Tsinghua University.