How the UTS Electrical Power and Energy team is developing a hybrid hardware-simulation laboratory to support local and international power and energy industry.
CEMPE @ UTS Tech Lab
Reconfigurable Power and Energy Network at UTS
The Electrical Power and Energy Systems Lab at the UTS Tech Lab have recently developed a state-of-the-art research facility to tackle complex power and energy conversion problems and challenges. Example scenarios are fault detection and protection for microgrids, energy efficiency improvement through distributed control of inverter-based energy sources, stabilising and adding value to the electricity network through integration of energy storage technologies, and electromagnetic impact of the switching power supply on the environment, etc.
The energy network laboratory is formed by a number of key equipment. Firstly, it is a supercomputer controlled real-time (RT) electricity grid simulator. It has the capability of interconnecting real hardware to the RT simulated grid, which is known as hardware-in-the-loop simulator. This enables us for example, to test existing or new equipment and evaluate the impact of other real power devices (e.g. inverters, battery chargers, wind turbines, PV modules, etc.) to an RT-simulated grid or vice-versa. We have other useful emulators such as PV emulator, battery (up to 80kVA) emulator, and a wind turbine emulator to setup a scalable microgrid. Moreover, protection system testing and coordination can be also assessed in our RT-grid simulator, providing you with a better protection analysis that the ones based on standard power flow analysis. We also have an electromagnetic (EM) compatibility testing facility which can perform pre-compliance test on EM emission of electrical equipment or apparatus. Together with the diverse areas of expertise, i.e. from magnetic devices to power electronics and electric machines, to power system and optimisation, the UTS power and energy conversion team is well-positioned to serve and collaborate with research and industry partners to investigate and solve complex energy-related issues.