Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /

The Smart Grid represents an unprecedented opportunity to move the energy industry into a new era of reliability, availability, and efficiency that will contribute to our economic and environmental health. During the transition period, it will be critical to carry out testing, technology improvement...

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Main Authors: Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074, Mitolo, Massimo, editor 437106, Padmanaban,Sanjeevikumar, 1978-, editor 642092, River Publishers (Online service) 655073
Format: software, multimedia
Language:eng
Published: Gistrup, Denmark : River Publishers, 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ebooks.com
https://drive.google.com/file/d/15hIT3r62bdxZ-JLFoM8MVXJJJ_l0GfpM/view?usp=drive_link
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author Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074
Mitolo, Massimo, editor 437106
Padmanaban,Sanjeevikumar, 1978-, editor 642092
River Publishers (Online service) 655073
author_facet Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074
Mitolo, Massimo, editor 437106
Padmanaban,Sanjeevikumar, 1978-, editor 642092
River Publishers (Online service) 655073
author_sort Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074
collection OCEAN
description The Smart Grid represents an unprecedented opportunity to move the energy industry into a new era of reliability, availability, and efficiency that will contribute to our economic and environmental health. During the transition period, it will be critical to carry out testing, technology improvements, consumer education, development of standards and regulations, and information sharing between projects to ensure that the benefits we envision from the Smart Grid become a reality. Today, an electricity disruption such as a blackout can have a domino effect—a series of failures that can affect banking, communications, traffic, and security. This is a particular threat in the winter, when homeowners can be left without heat. A smarter grid will add resiliency to our electric power system and make it better prepared to address emergencies such as severe storms, earthquakes, large solar flares, and terrorist attacks. Because of its two-way interactive capacity, the Smart Grid will allow for automatic rerouting when equipment fails or outages occur. This will minimize outages and minimize the effects when they do happen. When a power outage occurs, Smart Grid technologies will detect and isolate the outages, containing them before they become large-scale blackouts. These new technologies will also help ensure that electricity recovery resumes quickly and strategically after an emergency—routing electricity to emergency services first, for example. In addition, the Smart Grid will take greater advantage of customer-owned power generators to produce power when it is not available from utilities. By combining these "distributed generation" resources, a community could keep its health center, police department, traffic lights, phone system, and grocery stores operating during emergencies. In addition, the Smart Grid is a way to address an aging energy infrastructure that needs to be upgraded or replaced. This book shows that Smart Grids can address energy efficiency, bring increased awareness to consumers about the connection between electricity use and the environment, and bring increased national security to our energy system—drawing on greater amounts of home-grown electricity that is more resistant to natural disasters and attack.
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format software, multimedia
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institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia - OCEAN
language eng
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:6091792024-11-16T01:35:08ZSmart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms / Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074 Mitolo, Massimo, editor 437106 Padmanaban,Sanjeevikumar, 1978-, editor 642092 River Publishers (Online service) 655073 software, multimedia Electronic books 631902 Gistrup, Denmark : River Publishers,2023©2023engThe Smart Grid represents an unprecedented opportunity to move the energy industry into a new era of reliability, availability, and efficiency that will contribute to our economic and environmental health. During the transition period, it will be critical to carry out testing, technology improvements, consumer education, development of standards and regulations, and information sharing between projects to ensure that the benefits we envision from the Smart Grid become a reality. Today, an electricity disruption such as a blackout can have a domino effect—a series of failures that can affect banking, communications, traffic, and security. This is a particular threat in the winter, when homeowners can be left without heat. A smarter grid will add resiliency to our electric power system and make it better prepared to address emergencies such as severe storms, earthquakes, large solar flares, and terrorist attacks. Because of its two-way interactive capacity, the Smart Grid will allow for automatic rerouting when equipment fails or outages occur. This will minimize outages and minimize the effects when they do happen. When a power outage occurs, Smart Grid technologies will detect and isolate the outages, containing them before they become large-scale blackouts. These new technologies will also help ensure that electricity recovery resumes quickly and strategically after an emergency—routing electricity to emergency services first, for example. In addition, the Smart Grid will take greater advantage of customer-owned power generators to produce power when it is not available from utilities. By combining these "distributed generation" resources, a community could keep its health center, police department, traffic lights, phone system, and grocery stores operating during emergencies. In addition, the Smart Grid is a way to address an aging energy infrastructure that needs to be upgraded or replaced. This book shows that Smart Grids can address energy efficiency, bring increased awareness to consumers about the connection between electricity use and the environment, and bring increased national security to our energy system—drawing on greater amounts of home-grown electricity that is more resistant to natural disasters and attack.Includes bibliographical references and index.The Smart Grid represents an unprecedented opportunity to move the energy industry into a new era of reliability, availability, and efficiency that will contribute to our economic and environmental health. During the transition period, it will be critical to carry out testing, technology improvements, consumer education, development of standards and regulations, and information sharing between projects to ensure that the benefits we envision from the Smart Grid become a reality. Today, an electricity disruption such as a blackout can have a domino effect—a series of failures that can affect banking, communications, traffic, and security. This is a particular threat in the winter, when homeowners can be left without heat. A smarter grid will add resiliency to our electric power system and make it better prepared to address emergencies such as severe storms, earthquakes, large solar flares, and terrorist attacks. Because of its two-way interactive capacity, the Smart Grid will allow for automatic rerouting when equipment fails or outages occur. This will minimize outages and minimize the effects when they do happen. When a power outage occurs, Smart Grid technologies will detect and isolate the outages, containing them before they become large-scale blackouts. These new technologies will also help ensure that electricity recovery resumes quickly and strategically after an emergency—routing electricity to emergency services first, for example. In addition, the Smart Grid will take greater advantage of customer-owned power generators to produce power when it is not available from utilities. By combining these "distributed generation" resources, a community could keep its health center, police department, traffic lights, phone system, and grocery stores operating during emergencies. In addition, the Smart Grid is a way to address an aging energy infrastructure that needs to be upgraded or replaced. This book shows that Smart Grids can address energy efficiency, bring increased awareness to consumers about the connection between electricity use and the environment, and bring increased national security to our energy system—drawing on greater amounts of home-grown electricity that is more resistant to natural disasters and attack.Smart power gridshttps://www.ebooks.comhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/15hIT3r62bdxZ-JLFoM8MVXJJJ_l0GfpM/view?usp=drive_linkURN:ISBN:9781000795141
spellingShingle Smart power grids
Prakash, Kolla Bhanu, editor 655074
Mitolo, Massimo, editor 437106
Padmanaban,Sanjeevikumar, 1978-, editor 642092
River Publishers (Online service) 655073
Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title_full Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title_fullStr Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title_full_unstemmed Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title_short Smart and Power Grid Systems : Design Challenges and Paradigms /
title_sort smart and power grid systems design challenges and paradigms
topic Smart power grids
url https://www.ebooks.com
https://drive.google.com/file/d/15hIT3r62bdxZ-JLFoM8MVXJJJ_l0GfpM/view?usp=drive_link
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