Affiliation:
1. Mathematical Institute Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands
2. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences & Engineering Division (CEMSE) Thuwal Saudi Arabia
3. Chair of Mathematics for Uncertainty Quantification RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany
4. Alexander von Humboldt Professor in Mathematics for Uncertainty Quantification RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany
Abstract
AbstractThis work considers a short‐term, continuous time setting characterized by a coupled power supply system controlled exclusively by a single provider and comprising a cascade of hydropower systems (dams), fossil fuel power stations, and a storage capacity modeled by a single large battery. Cascaded hydropower generators introduce time‐delay effects in the state dynamics, which are modeled with differential equations, making it impossible to use classical dynamic programming. We address this issue by introducing a novel Lagrangian relaxation technique over continuous‐time constraints, constructing a nearly optimal policy efficiently. This approach yields a convex, nonsmooth optimization dual problem to recover the optimal Lagrangian multipliers, which is numerically solved using a limited memory bundle method. At each step of the dual optimization, we need to solve an optimization subproblem. Given the current values of the Lagrangian multipliers, the time delays are no longer active, and we can solve a corresponding nonlinear Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman (HJB) Partial Differential Equation (PDE) for the optimization subproblem. The HJB PDE solver provides both the current value of the dual function and its subgradient, and is trivially parallelizable over the state space for each time step. To handle the infinite‐dimensional nature of the Lagrange multipliers, we design an adaptive refinement strategy to control the duality gap. Furthermore, we use a penalization technique for the constructed admissible primal solution to smooth the controls while achieving a sufficiently small duality gap. Numerical results based on the Uruguayan power system demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed mathematical models and numerical approach.