Author
Listed:
- Nahar F. Alshammari
(Department of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Jouf University, Sakaka 72388, Saudi Arabia)
- Faraj H. Alyami
(Electrical Engineering Department, College of Engineering, Najran University, Najran 11001, Saudi Arabia
Science and Engineering Research Center, Najran University, Najran 11001, Saudi Arabia)
- Sheeraz Iqbal
(Interdisciplinary Research Center for Sustainable Energy Systems, Research and Innovation, King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals, Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia)
- Md Shafiullah
(Interdisciplinary Research Center for Sustainable Energy Systems, Research and Innovation, King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals, Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia)
- Saleh Al Dawsari
(Electrical Engineering Department, College of Engineering, Najran University, Najran 11001, Saudi Arabia
School of Engineering, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF24 3AA, UK)
Abstract
The paper proposed an adaptive preference-based multi-objective optimization framework of intelligent energy management in smart microgrids that are dynamically adapted to operational priorities with regard to real-time grid conditions, stakeholder preferences, and environmental constraints. The suggested hierarchical algorithm combines an improved Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) with an advanced dynamic preference weight distribution system that can trade off between minimization of operational cost. Reduction of carbon emission, enhancement of voltage stability, enhancement of power quality and maximization of system reliability and adaptability to different operational conditions, such as renewable energy intermittency, demand response schemes and emergencies. The framework presents a new multi-layered preference-learning module that represents the intricate stakeholder priorities in terms of more sophisticated fuzzy logic-based decision matrices, neural network preference prediction, and adaptive reinforcement learning methods and transforms them into dynamic optimization weights with feedback mechanisms. Large-scale simulations on a modified IEEE 33-bus test system coupled with various renewable energy sources, energy storage facilities, electric vehicle charging points, and smart appliances demonstrate superior improvements in performance: 23.7% operational costs reduction, 31.2% carbon emissions reduction, 18.5% system reliability improvement, 15.3% voltage stability increase and 12.8% reduction of deviations in power quality. The proposed system has an adaptive nature with better performance in a variety of operating conditions such as peak demand times, renewable energy intermittency events, grid-connected and islanded operations, emergency load shedding situations, and cyber–physical security risks. The framework is shown to be highly effective under different conditions of uncertainty and variation in parameters and communication delay through intense sensitivity analysis and robustness testing, thus demonstrating its practical applicability in real-world applications of smart grids.
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