研究目的
Investigating the arrangements for increasing self-consumption and maximising the value of distributed photovoltaics on apartment buildings.
研究成果
The findings suggest that the increased self-consumption and self-sufficiency brought about by application of a shared PV system to aggregated loads across an apartment building can be translated into financial benefits for households, in the right circumstances. Behind the meter sharing of PV systems sized at 1.0–1.5 kWp/unit offers a means of avoiding the regulatory complexities of embedded networks and can be preferable to individual systems.
研究不足
The exclusion of temperature-dependent profiles has allowed this common load data to be combined with the 2013 apartment load and PV generation data (aligned seasonally but for a different year), it also limits the broader applicability of the results.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection
The study utilizes the Multi-Occupancy Residential Electricity with PV and Storage (morePVs) tool to model electricity flows and financial transactions in apartment buildings under a range of technical and financial settings.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources
Annual load profiles for 500 ‘virtual buildings’ (VBs) have been created using real 30-min load data from a dataset of thousands of apartments, and common property (CP) load data for ten apartment buildings of varying size and characteristics in New South Wales (NSW), Australia.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials
Not explicitly mentioned in the provided text.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow
For each site, the ‘PV Ratio’ was calculated as the ratio of annual generation of the max_pv array to annual building load, averaged across all VBs.
5:Data Analysis Methods
The Python code for morePVs has been made available open source for transparency and to allow replication of this study and application to other datasets.
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