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Description
Understanding the graphical structure of the electric power system is important

in assessing reliability, robustness, and the risk of failure of operations of this criti-

cal infrastructure network. Statistical graph models of complex networks yield much

insight into the underlying processes that are supported by the network. Such gen-

erative graph models are also

Understanding the graphical structure of the electric power system is important

in assessing reliability, robustness, and the risk of failure of operations of this criti-

cal infrastructure network. Statistical graph models of complex networks yield much

insight into the underlying processes that are supported by the network. Such gen-

erative graph models are also capable of generating synthetic graphs representative

of the real network. This is particularly important since the smaller number of tradi-

tionally available test systems, such as the IEEE systems, have been largely deemed

to be insucient for supporting large-scale simulation studies and commercial-grade

algorithm development. Thus, there is a need for statistical generative models of

electric power network that capture both topological and electrical properties of the

network and are scalable.

Generating synthetic network graphs that capture key topological and electrical

characteristics of real-world electric power systems is important in aiding widespread

and accurate analysis of these systems. Classical statistical models of graphs, such as

small-world networks or Erd}os-Renyi graphs, are unable to generate synthetic graphs

that accurately represent the topology of real electric power networks { networks

characterized by highly dense local connectivity and clustering and sparse long-haul

links.

This thesis presents a parametrized model that captures the above-mentioned

unique topological properties of electric power networks. Specically, a new Cluster-

and-Connect model is introduced to generate synthetic graphs using these parameters.

Using a uniform set of metrics proposed in the literature, the accuracy of the proposed

model is evaluated by comparing the synthetic models generated for specic real

electric network graphs. In addition to topological properties, the electrical properties

are captured via line impedances that have been shown to be modeled reliably by well-studied heavy tailed distributions. The details of the research, results obtained and

conclusions drawn are presented in this document.
ContributorsHu, Jiale (Author) / Sankar, Lalitha (Thesis advisor) / Vittal, Vijay (Committee member) / Scaglione, Anna (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
This thesis investigates three different resource allocation problems, aiming to achieve two common goals: i) adaptivity to a fast-changing environment, ii) distribution of the computation tasks to achieve a favorable solution. The motivation for this work relies on the modern-era proliferation of sensors and devices, in the Data Acquisition Systems

This thesis investigates three different resource allocation problems, aiming to achieve two common goals: i) adaptivity to a fast-changing environment, ii) distribution of the computation tasks to achieve a favorable solution. The motivation for this work relies on the modern-era proliferation of sensors and devices, in the Data Acquisition Systems (DAS) layer of the Internet of Things (IoT) architecture. To avoid congestion and enable low-latency services, limits have to be imposed on the amount of decisions that can be centralized (i.e. solved in the ``cloud") and/or amount of control information that devices can exchange. This has been the motivation to develop i) a lightweight PHY Layer protocol for time synchronization and scheduling in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs), ii) an adaptive receiver that enables Sub-Nyquist sampling, for efficient spectrum sensing at high frequencies, and iii) an SDN-scheme for resource-sharing across different technologies and operators, to harmoniously and holistically respond to fluctuations in demands at the eNodeB' s layer.

The proposed solution for time synchronization and scheduling is a new protocol, called PulseSS, which is completely event-driven and is inspired by biological networks. The results on convergence and accuracy for locally connected networks, presented in this thesis, constitute the theoretical foundation for the protocol in terms of performance guarantee. The derived limits provided guidelines for ad-hoc solutions in the actual implementation of the protocol.

The proposed receiver for Compressive Spectrum Sensing (CSS) aims at tackling the noise folding phenomenon, e.g., the accumulation of noise from different sub-bands that are folded, prior to sampling and baseband processing, when an analog front-end aliasing mixer is utilized.

The sensing phase design has been conducted via a utility maximization approach, thus the scheme derived has been called Cognitive Utility Maximization Multiple Access (CUMMA).

The framework described in the last part of the thesis is inspired by stochastic network optimization tools and dynamics.

While convergence of the proposed approach remains an open problem, the numerical results here presented suggest the capability of the algorithm to handle traffic fluctuations across operators, while respecting different time and economic constraints.

The scheme has been named Decomposition of Infrastructure-based Dynamic Resource Allocation (DIDRA).
ContributorsFerrari, Lorenzo (Author) / Scaglione, Anna (Thesis advisor) / Bliss, Daniel (Committee member) / Ying, Lei (Committee member) / Reisslein, Martin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
A distributed framework is proposed for addressing resource sharing problems in communications, micro-economics, and various other network systems. The approach uses a hierarchical multi-layer decomposition for network utility maximization. This methodology uses central management and distributed computations to allocate resources, and in dynamic environments, it aims to efficiently respond to

A distributed framework is proposed for addressing resource sharing problems in communications, micro-economics, and various other network systems. The approach uses a hierarchical multi-layer decomposition for network utility maximization. This methodology uses central management and distributed computations to allocate resources, and in dynamic environments, it aims to efficiently respond to network changes. The main contributions include a comprehensive description of an exemplary unifying optimization framework to share resources across different operators and platforms, and a detailed analysis of the generalized methods under the assumption that the network changes are on the same time-scale as the convergence time of the algorithms employed for local computations.Assuming strong concavity and smoothness of the objective functions, and under some stability conditions for each layer, convergence rates and optimality bounds are presented. The effectiveness of the framework is demonstrated through numerical examples. Furthermore, a novel Federated Edge Network Utility Maximization (FEdg-NUM) architecture is proposed for solving large-scale distributed network utility maximization problems in a fully decentralized way. In FEdg-NUM, clients with private utilities communicate with a peer-to-peer network of edge servers. Convergence properties are examined both through analysis and numerical simulations, and potential applications are highlighted. Finally, problems in a complex stochastic dynamic environment, specifically motivated by resource sharing during disasters occurring in multiple areas, are studied. In a hierarchical management scenario, a method of applying a primal-dual algorithm in higher-layer along with deep reinforcement learning algorithms in localities is presented. Analytical details as well as case studies such as pandemic and wildfire response are provided.
ContributorsKarakoc, Nurullah (Author) / Scaglione, Anna (Thesis advisor) / Reisslein, Martin (Thesis advisor) / Nedich, Angelia (Committee member) / Michelusi, Nicolò (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Two thirds of the U.S. power systems are operated under market structures. A good market design should maximize social welfare and give market participants proper incentives to follow market solutions. Pricing schemes play very important roles in market design.

Locational marginal pricing scheme is the core pricing scheme in energy markets.

Two thirds of the U.S. power systems are operated under market structures. A good market design should maximize social welfare and give market participants proper incentives to follow market solutions. Pricing schemes play very important roles in market design.

Locational marginal pricing scheme is the core pricing scheme in energy markets. Locational marginal prices are good pricing signals for dispatch marginal costs. However, the locational marginal prices alone are not incentive compatible since energy markets are non-convex markets. Locational marginal prices capture dispatch costs but fail to capture commitment costs such as startup cost, no-load cost, and shutdown cost. As a result, uplift payments are paid to generators in markets in order to provide incentives for generators to follow market solutions. The uplift payments distort pricing signals.

In this thesis, pricing schemes in electric energy markets are studied. In the first part, convex hull pricing scheme is studied and the pricing model is extended with network constraints. The subgradient algorithm is applied to solve the pricing model. In the second part, a stochastic dispatchable pricing model is proposed to better address the non-convexity and uncertainty issues in day-ahead energy markets. In the third part, an energy storage arbitrage model with the current locational marginal price scheme is studied. Numerical test cases are studied to show the arguments in this thesis.

The overall market and pricing scheme design is a very complex problem. This thesis gives a thorough overview of pricing schemes in day-ahead energy markets and addressed several key issues in the markets. New pricing schemes are proposed to improve market efficiency.
ContributorsLi, Chao (Author) / Hedman, Kory (Thesis advisor) / Sankar, Lalitha (Committee member) / Scaglione, Anna (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016